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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1936)
PAGE sue BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON". WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1936. MEDFORDTEIBUNE "Everyone ts Bontbara Orcgo BMdj the Hal) TrihttB" Dally Bxpt Hatnrdar PubiUh. by MUDtTORD PRINTINO CO. Il lt lt N. rtr St. Phone T ROBERT W. RUHU Editor URN ESI R. OlbSTRAP. Uanatr. to fndpMif1ant Nawapapar Dd tared lacond-claai mat tar at Mad- tord, Oragnu, UDdar A.OI of March I, 11$ SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail Id Arivanca- . Dail)-. ooa raar... " Dally, all months Daily, on moots nrrtar. tn Advanca If afford. aaB laod, Jaoktonvtlla. Caotral Point. Pboaolx. Ta lant Sold Hill end hlihwaya Dally, on raar 41.00 Dally, als montha Daily, on month 10 All Urmi eaah Id advanoa. Official paper of tha City ot Hdford Official Paper of JarkaflB County UliMHEH OP VUK A8H4MJI Al t- PKJUM- Bw wiring full liHMd Wlra (ferrlca. Tha Associated Praa la aioluilvaly a tit lad to tha mi tor publication of all nawa dlanatchaa eradltad to it or otnar vita oradltad to thla papar, and alao to tha local nawa publlahad haraio. All rtchta for oublleatlon of dlapatohaa htralo ara alao raaarvad. MEMBER OF ftNTTBD PRS8S MBMBBB OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Rapraaantatlvaa L a U On EN MEN A COHFANl Oftlcat in New fork. Chicago Datroft San Pranolaco, Loa Angalaa Seattle, Portland Ye Smudge Pot 8 Arthur Perry. A Northern California suto wreck last week la attributed to "a loose steering wheel nut" the kind monkey-wrench will fit, a October U the month magnificent In these parts. In comparison the other eleven are hardly worth calen dar room. They are Just the allotted number of dayg, following each otnar until they total 80 or 31. But October Is different a month to be alive In. A perfect Heaven would be a realm whrre ft Rogue River valley October never ceased, and It was always Octo ber. It la the one month of the twelve that has no weather apt to scare the hell out of orchardlste. October here has no falling or faults of Its own making. But every other October, It Is defiled and desecrated by the Jit tery yawping of candidates and politician. 'DEL NORTE SOPRANO HEARD IN PFNVER' (Del Norte Triplicate) With thr wind at her back, no doubt " A number of Portland Democrat ni? here on official business. Thny will sot their first glimpse of Cratr 1-1:, and some claim they have f"Mtht sight of their first Landon punf lower button. THK ('.VMIUUIN WAKMH Ll (Eu gone Rrf Kter-nimid) "Ye gods. It Is crime enough to be s Republican, but to vot for a ye man of the liberty lengut. and a disciple of Rome. Is a crime which no 'conscientious American will commit." (Prom a letter.) V. Brophy, the Lake Crk. cowman, has shipped 24 cars of cows to Frisco. He feels like a horticulturist who ha Just shipped 24 cars of pears to New York. Rampant and random shooting con tinues briskly tn the hills and dales of the commonwealth. A price pump kin was shot for aomethlng In a To Jo district field Mon. Dewey Hill, the Prospect hillbilly, towned Mon.. and was sheared and ahaved. He plans a trip to Hollywood In Dec. as ha did last winter. He wfll not divulge which movie-queen Invited him to come down. This Is Fire Prevention Week, so don't set your barn on fire. Many recall It that 15 yeara ago next month there was a Pure Camphor week. F, Bybee. the Jvllle serf, has some Blsrkface Hampshire aheep. They will be mutton before they are minstrels. Farmers report a bear Is raiding their turkey flocks. The bear la one that Uncle John Orlffin, 83. the pio neer hunter, failed to alsy or wound. The eon of the president la charged with demanding a $900,000 profit on tha aale of airplane to Russia. Tt may now develop that the S500.000 was to be used as a World Peace fund, and besides. Andrew Mellon hn too much money. a The Governor has lifted the ban on hunting. However, a number of care fill nlmrods report their better 'i' At 111 have their foot down. pan citio makes a tackle. (OSC. Barometer) "ft Is only natural that big he-man. ' acquainted with the applause of snorta followers, should confine a tit tle of their valuable time to the fairer aei, but many believe that in a few specific Instances on the Ore eon State foot bn 11 team. It has come to the point where love-slcknesa la Interfering with the athlete's playing sblllty. It Is difficult to stay home nights, to turn out willingly and regularly for practice when the sweet bells of love ring In your heart and still have the proper attitude for football com petition. It Is useless to try and evade the Issue bv declaring that the men's men who eat a half-pound of raw meat for breakfast and taper off at night with a peck of potatoes and a pot roast do not get any such Ideas or love In their heads." Han don Qimta Filled SALEM. Oct. 7. Marlon coun ty passed Its 81.000 Bandon fire re lief quotA yesterday and call for fur ther aid closed. All contributions were voluntary, Chairman W. C. Wlnalow said, and no personal solicitation was necesssrv. Jae Mali Trlbuu wont ids. 1 D ()W Martian Dialogues, No. 1 Ths character! In this dialogue art entirely Imaginary. If they eeem to reaemble certain well known characters In the national or local scene, the resemblance la entirely accidental. The conversation la carried on entirely between, the Man from Mars, sent to the earth, to report the presidential campaign for his paper tha Martian Meteor, and the first man he meets, who happens to be Just an average citizen, the former designated as M. M. and the latter as A. O. M. M.: What's all the noie about t A. C. : Oh the local Liberty Leaguers are celebrating. M. M.: What are they celebrating f A. C: They're celebrating the last issue of the Literary Digest. . M. M. (startled) s Does that mean the election is over and they have wont A. 0.: Oh no, stranger, it's what we call a straw vote, there 're a lot of 'em round the country, most of 'em the other way, but this one puts these boys ahead, an' it doesn't take much to set 'em goin', so they're celebrating. M. M, (consulting notes) s Is that what you would term, in the native vernacular, grasping at straws, or (again consulting notes) erecting a straw man! A. C. : Don't ask me stranger, can't make head or tail of it, myself. M. M. : What is so confusing! A. C. : Well you see that fat boy with the red face and white vest, bangin' the drum and leadin' the percessiont M. M. : Yes, he appears to be enjoying himself tremendously. A. C. s Well he was dead broke three or four years ago or said he was. Didn't have a dime, had to close up all his houses but one, couldn't find a tenant for his Empire Hate buildin', banks was bustin' all round him and he was runnin' up and down the street yellin', "save me, save me, or I'm ruined. Why don't somebody do somethin' about it!" M. M. i Yes, yes, go on. A. C. : Well somebody did. This man Roosevelt' come in, and he sure done somethin' about it. He fixed up the banks, got business to goin', chased them crooks and second-story bums out ot Wall Street, and put that fat boy with the white vest on his feet again, look at him with his gold watch chain swingin' spry as Fred Astairc. SI. Jr. : Yes I sec, my good man, what is so confusing about thatt Naturally he is delighted and celebrating his good fortune. A. C.i But that's jest it. He ain't! M. M.: What do you mean he "ain't?" A. C. : Well he ain't. Can't you hear the song he and them boys is singin't Listen. (They listen.) M. M. i Yes I hear, it sounds like "Down with Roosevelt and the New Deal, up with the G. 0. A. C: That's it. It. M. (in deep thought) : That I want to get this thing straight. is the local brunch of the well known Liberty League, conduct ing a somewhat boisterous, but T take it typically American celebration. The cause of the tory, of the Q. 0. P., and its presidential candidate, one Alfred Landon from Kansas,-T believe over your present chief execu tive, a Mr. IioohcvcU and his Now Deal. In my country such a cclebnilion might be considered slightly premature, but we will let Hint puss. Now if my notes are correct and your remarks appear to confirm them, the Q. 0. P. was in control of affairs, when that slightly npoplectio gentleman beating the bass drum, was in sore financial straits, and wanted somebody to do some thing about it. And somebody did something about it, namely Roosevelt and his New Deal. the old deal, ho was what you also call ''down and out" and under the New. Deal he is enjoying a relatively high level of material prosperity t" ' "He's on easy street, I tell you, raised his rents, bought a new car, goin' places again on "And yet he is celebrating the fact that the party that did this for him, that did SOMETHING that made the wheels hum again is going out to be replaced by the party that didn't, that did NOTHING. Is "That's right." "That is strange, very strange, particularly from what 1 have read of your great country. Mmh. I assume of course, that this man Governor Landon, is also strongly opposed to the New Deal, which his ardent supporters, here, I take 'it consider so cockeyed, and the solo cause of all their present troubles, whatever those troubles may be,!" ' A. C. : Not on your life, stranger, that's why I can't make head or tail of itl Course I only know what I read in the papers, but they say until he got this nomination this man Landon was stronger 'an horseradish for the New Deal, backed Roosevelt harder than any governor in the union, to the tune of millions and millions of Now Deal money for his own state. And if he's agin anything in the New Deal now, I can't make out what it is Spcndin the taxpayers' money! Say, he's fur federal relief, checks for the fanners bigger and better ones, strong fur the CCC, pensions for old people, unemployment insurance, no child labor, eraekin' down on the holding com panies, soiikin' the power trust, an' I don't know what all. If he's agin anything Roosevelt has done, then I can't make out what it is, unless its this insurance of bank deposits he was agin that a couple o' years ago, but I calculate he'll be for it before 'lection is over. And yet listen to 'em yell "up with Landon and down with the New Deal." I tell ye I can't figger it. Canyon! M. M.i If you, a native of this great country, can't figure h out, how do you expect me, a visitor from Mars, to do so! Now in my country, if wc were against what you call a deal, new or old, wc would put it out. If we were for it, wc would keep it in. Hut under no conceivable circumstances would we consider putting out a man who gave us what we asked for, and then for purely partisan purposes, claim he hadn't done it, so we could put in a man who was pledged to try to do the SAMK THING. ThMt just doesn't make sense. I am like vou, 1 don't understand it. Whafs tliBt word so popular in your country now J A. C.i Cockeyed t M. M..- That's right, such action looks plain cock-eyed to me. Olrla are dlalbl, for a dowry If tlwy Iravd to be married alter beln employed witn the nnt'.nh postof- flce six '.r:.rs or more. Approkiuutelf U0.0OO Isrmers bavt P. and Landon !" does seem strange. Let's see, (Again cousults notes) This celebration is a straw vote vic Under what. I presume you call high." ' that correct!" signed work sheets to participate In the soil-Improvement program m North Carolina Tune lu K9L i. evening, day thru mday, t pm. Mon. Personal Health Service By William Htgned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If s stamped, self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brier 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 Dr. William Brady, 265 EI Camlno, Beverly Hills, CalJf. A LAYMA.: TELLS Why don't you teach your readers, asks one of them, that curs can be bought and health will come only through correct eating and living? Tell them to de-w-7"!y.'-M serve health and not to be looking or a cure or a savior for the sins they com mit. I write from experl e n c e. On your suggestion f underwent in jection treat- ment for hem orrholds, which cost me 9180, and In a few weeks I hod the same trouble again. Not until the cause was removed did I enjoy health again, and that I did myself. (O. P. X.) . The trouble Is nobody will bother with an ounce of prevention until he needs a pound of cure. C. P. K. has more confidence In correct eating and living than I have. I believe right eating nablta and good general hygiene will prevent hemor rhoids, but I doubt that reform In this respect will remove tue penalty of sin in the way this layman Im plies. Rather, I fancy, what happen ed In his case was vhls. Ho had not one or two but, say, half a dozen hemor rhoids. At each sitting the doctor Injected one. It requited perhaps two months In all, with treatments at Intervals of a week or ten days, at the patient's convenience. (These treatments are no more palnfu' and detain the patient no more than or dinary dental treatments do, when something is wrong with a tooth.) Then about the time the doctor ob literated the last pile. C. P. K. began eating somebody'a health1 food or re fraining from smoking before meals or cutting down on his physic dope, and Uko a tegular Yankee, felt sore about it and tried to withhold credit where credit was due. That is the essence of 09 out of a hundred tes timonials that mislead gullible .folk eyery day. - You who haven't ' hemorrhoids yet will pay no attention to this but anyway I'm going to mention some of the common causes of this exceedingly common trouble. The knowledge may at lean enable some victims to obtain proper treatment or prevent them from oolng clecolved by fake pile cures. Hemorrhoids, otherwise called piles, are varicose (swollen, enlarged, di lated) veins. Umess they bleed or becomo Inflamed (painful) the pa tient may be unaware of their pres ence. Many persons with hemorrhoids have erroneously assumed that the Interval between attacks of inflam mation or bleeding nv-ant cure. Where the veins about the sphinc ter muscle st the orifice ore enlarged the condition In called Internal plies y-QQMc.nfvre NEW YOKK. Oct. 7. Muny believe the present theatrical season Is to be the supreme testing period and its success or failure will be used as a gauge in fu ture productions. There's no deny ing the legitimate Is wobbly hut it has shown mar velous vitality. The Rlalto is not to have so many shows this year. The fly-by-nlght turkey opusrs have be como entirely too hazardous. Nearly all the shoe string boys who mado life such a headache for the Gilbert Gabriels have turned to other tricks of petty pillaging. It la safe to say that in the weed ing out process there will bo left, even though small, the finest array of smartly produced and excellently cast entertainment In years. It will be a choice season for the discrimi nating play goer who wants to sec the entire list. The astute producer knows the stage as It waa before the talkies will never come back. To survive he must provide extraordinary fare. And there's a handful of the forthright impresarios, such as Brock Pember ton, Arthur Hopkins and Sam Harris, left who appear to be planning to do Just that. Reflection: NV one need he lone some In New York except by choice. There's always the aquarium ana me roo. A heigh ho avenue couturier whose gown waa admired by the ob serving stylist. Lois Long, replied with a sniff: "Oh, this Is only a rotten banana." fifhe explained that Just as the Italian fruit cart women have to eat the rotten bnnanaa that remain unsold, so she had to wear her "stick ers." There's a tacky place on 0th aremie In the 20's under the high-spun Kl where lemon butter Is sold at 10 cent Jar. Also all sorts of unusual pre ?erves, quince, goo.wberry. yellow to mato. A Dlckensy lady puts them up tn back of.Uie shop, no two In the same style Jar. Nothing to my no tion sounds so appetising and sapid as lemon butter. And we wonder if New Yorkers ever heard of Brewls, a hayfleld libation made of water, mo lasses and ginger. It must be out of a Jug kept In the spring house until cool. There's a despairing young writer. a lovr qf color, calety and life, who kfeps much within hlmsrlf tM..ue of editorial diffidence. The other day TF Brady, M.P. conforming to Instructions. Address US SOMETHING or hemorrhoids; if veins below the sphincter are enlarged it Is called ex ternal hemorrhoids. The veins of this region empty di rectly Into the portal system csrry lng blood to the Uver. Therefore any congestion of the liver or any over loading of the portal systen Is likely to predispose the plies. The hemorrhoidal veins and the veins Into which they empty have no valves. Therefore In the erect position there Is the weight or pressure of a column of blood upon the walls of these veins. Our upright posture Is one cause of plies. Our common addiction to physic laxatives, cathartics, purgatives, enemas, suppositories and other un natural "olds" Is a prolific cause of piles. QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS Catalogue You started to give a list of your leaflets, but evidently they rang the bell on you before you got well un der way. It seems to me it would be a most helpful service to all readers to have a list of the excellent health pamphlets you provide . . (R.M-D.) Answer Here are some more, avail able to correspondents who inclose 3-cent-stamped envelope bearing the correct address: Poison Ivy, Tubercu losis, Pocket First Aid Kit, Diet for Hyperacidity, Head Noises and Deaf ness, Varicose Veins and Ulcers, Cho rea (St. Vltus's Dance). Conservation of the Teeth, Hardening of the Ar teries, Belly Breathing, Climate, Gar gle for Hoarseness of Speakers or Singers. Arthritis, Coryza, Care of Peet, Croup. Hay Fever, Asthma. Men opause, Displacement. Menue for Peptic Ulcer patient and for Those Who Have to Live With the Patient. Hernia, Whooping 3ough. Pruritus, ichthyosis (Fish Skin). Sczema, Pso hlasis, Prostatic Obstruction, Sex Ad vice to Boys, Sources of Sex Pamph lets for Girls. Advice to Newly Mar ried (Sent ONTjY to Mrs.). Alcohol ism, Sciatica. Catarrh, Muscular Rheumatism, Chronic Nephritis (Brlght's Disease), Insomnia, Gonor rhea, Syphilis, Valvular Disease. Su perfluous Hair. Proatbite, Warts. Her pes Zoster (Shingles). Styes, Bolls, Intermarriage, Hi ves, and I refrain from adding what have you. (To be continued.) Geographic Tongue Please let me know if anything can be done to cure geographic tongue . . . (D. R.) Answer It will at least do no harm to try for a month or two the home made iron medicine described in book let "Blood and Health" available if you send ten cents and stamped ad dressed envelope. (Copyright 1938, Jonn P. Olllc Co.) Ed Note: Peitont wishing to communicate with Dr. Bind? should send letter direct to Or William Brndy. M. D. 265 El Camlno, Beverly IIIHs, Calif. I saw a dazzling tie I thought might please and sent it to his Patchln Place address. Today came this panegyric: "Something mysteriously marvelous has happened to me. New fires are kindled in my heart, a new youth garbed in tumultuously beautiful glory. In short, the promise of mo ments when my vanity will shino in undeserved gorgltude. I am pleased, proud. I laugh and go forth to con quer." A bright tie affecta many that way, I always want to skip gutters and yodel. Charles Francis Coe, known to inti mates as Socker," Is one of the few writers of fight fiction who knows how to handle his dukes expertly. He was, in his U. 8. navy days, of cham pionship calibre. Another writer who showed fistic prowess waa Albert Pay son Torhune. said by none other than James J. Corbett to be one of the best boxers he ever fsced. Coe has a 8unday left. But literature Inter ested him more and It was a wise course. He has made his fight knowl edge pay handsomely In ma Ratines, books and movies. One of his closest friends Is Gene Tunney. They were pow-wowing about one of the open -col la red. plpe-smoklng. philosophic poseurs and his strain for whimsy and the folksy flslr. And someone recalled Carl Van Doren's idoloclastlc line: 'He got mellow be fore he got ripe.H British seamen are noted for calm. I was thinking today of a crossing in the AquatanU In a 7 5 -mile gale, the ship upending and shivering down. As I swayed down a companion way a cabin steward cheerloed: "A bit tippy, sir." From one of the Jaunty Jongleurs: 9ald Ursula Parrott to Roscoe Pea cock You're not as funny as Stephen Lea cock. Said Roscoe Peacock to Ursula Parrott You're not as clever as Cora Jarrett (Copyright. 1936. McNaught Syndicate) COAST BUTTER STOCKS FAR ABOVE YEAR AGO SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 7. (AP) Butter dealers along the Pacific coast have about 35 per. cent more butter In storage than a year ago. Market service records showed 0.167.953 pounds on hand at the 6 principal markets from Seattle to San Diego, compared with 6,313.113 pounds a year co. CARD READINGS Madame A. .Mueller Honest and Reliable with best of references. 7 3 Sherman Street. Phone 965-J-x (trading arte end 51.00. Ad?. Comment of the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS IN a speech at Carnegie hall, in New York, Al Smith breaks his life long ties with the Democratic party and publicly endorses Governor Lan don, the Republican nominee. "I firmly believe," he says, 'that the remedy for all the ills we are suffering from today is the election of Alfred M. Landon." That Is pretty far for a lifelong Democrat to go. AL SMITH,- one-time Democratic .governor of New York, one-time Democratic candidate for president, old-time pillar of the Democratic party. Jumps the reservation and In a publlo and widely-heralded speech urges the election of the Republican nominee. Senator Carter Glass, who has dis agreed with the New Deal and Its Ideas (especially Its financial Ideas) about as often as any man in public life, REMAINS ON the reservation, although aittlng practically silent In hlateepee. WHY this difference? The answer Is plain. Al Smith is out of politics. He Is look ing for no further party favors. So he doesn't hesitate to speak his mind. But Senator Glass ISNT out of politics. He Is a member of the over whelmingly Democratic state of Vir ginia. He isn't ready to QUIT being senator from Virginia. And long ex perience and observation tell him plainly that the politician who leaves his party is lost. So he sits tight and saya nothing. THERE are tiany conservative Democrats in congress especial ly among the older senators and rep resentatives from the South, whose leadership Is InherenMy and funda mentally conservative. These conservative Democrats from the solid South, whose traditional Institutions depend for their perpet uation and submergence of the nu merically large HAVE-NOT negro vote, can't possibly see eye to eye with the New Deal and Its reliance upon making the have-nots class conscious. But they go along with it, while it is In power, because technically It is the Democratic party and as long as the Democratic party remains In power THEY remain In power. They HAVE to remain regular. Al Smith doesn't. WHAT Is the moral to all this? Well, U It has a moral it ts that you can't accept as gospel what the politicians say because their for tunes are bound up with fortunes of the party and they have to go along with It, no matter what It does or what they THINK about what It does. If Al Smith's opinions havo weight, It la because he holds them so strong ly that In order to express them he Is willing to break with party tradition. That gives to what he has to say the ring of sincerity. Join ETHELWYN B HOFFMANN'S Hosiery Club Every 13th pair free. AUTO LOANS AND REFINANCING W, E. Thomas, 45 S. Central. When you. want heat call 1184 Petroleum Heat & Burner Co. Dr. John D. Moore, Knoxvllle city physician, says children appear not to mind being vaccinated when they aro In groups. use Mail Tribune want ads. EVERY CITIZEN IN OREGON EVERY SOLDIER. SAILOR AND MARINE i Edward E. Hayes, past national commander of the American Legion will be in Medford Thursday, October the 8th, and will address the voters of southern Oregon at the Senior High School auditorium at 8 o'clock P. M. Mr. Hayes is one of the outstanding speakers on the American platform today, and he will have a message that will interest every man, woman and child in Oregon. Be sure to hear Mr. Hayes at the High School auditorium on Thursday, October the 8th, at 8 o'clock. High school students are especially invited. REPUBLICAN COUNTY CENTRAL COMMITTEE. Tune in on KSL every evening Monday through Friday at 8 o'clock P. M. (Continued from Page One.) But now, under devaluation, there are 31 francs in the dollar Instead of 16. The French cost of the watch becomes 31 francs plus the tariff. Reduce the tariff 15 percent, and the current French cost of the watch be comes 35 francs. Thus the net effect of devaluation and a 15 percent tariff reduction Is an Increase of five francs in the French tariff protection on this hypo thetical American dollar watch. French manufecturers are said to figure that devaluation gave them generally the equivalent of an addi tional protective ad valorem surtax of 40 percent. This figure may be too high, but, whatever' It is. It more than offsets the encouragement to immediate world trade Involved in the tariff reductions. These Icy figures do not, of course, take Into consideration the purely psychological effects of French ac tion, which are really encouraging For instance, the United States did not even make a gesture toward tho reduction of our tariff rates when we devalued. The reason the French are doing It is to put a ceiling on domestic prices. They do not want that competitive French-made dollar watch, for Instance, to Increase too much In price. What France Is doing Is solely In her own Interest. It Is not final She may eventually devalue further She will have trouble with her prices. Also there is the problem of French wages, which are still low. ' But, at least, her action has start ed world people to thinking and talk ing about such remote objectives as stabilization, trade and economic peace. In the minds of trade real ists here, that Is something. Those confidential U. 8. proposals for a neutrality pact with Latin America are really intended to be an Invitation to the League of Nations to go and do likewise In Europe. That is what is in the mind of at least one top official here. The proposals are simple plans to get Latin American nations to adopt the present neutrality inw now In effect here. One Important addition al provision is made: Neutrality bans would be applied against nations which go to war without formal dec laratlons. Just what U. S. officials arc up to in also suggesting a consultative commission of nations m the west ern hemisphere Is not yet clear. The proposal sppiMfiPK that the commis sioners shall be foreign ministers ot the respective countries, that they shall pay their own expenses and pool the expenses of the commission. In that routine. It works Just as the GREEN SLAB WOP Big DOUBLE LOAD FOR DIRECT MILL DELIVERIES FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! Phone 7 Now TIMBER PRODUCTS CO. END OF NORTH ml league Is organized. But just ndnr Important the commission would Pt has not yet been determined. There are several proposed drafts and In none la there any mention Of specifications, such as how often tzm consultative commission should m&fU Behind the current political debate over the social security program Ilea the inside fact that Its New Deal sponsors long ago decided many changes would have to be made in it. They began discovering faults ra their plan even before the president signed the bill. The situation Is not ripe for such a public announcement now, and rs may therefore be denied, but you may bet more than a nickel that the re serve fund theory is definitely out, and that there will be an overhauling of the act next year, no matter who; has charge of It. Flight 'o Time & Medtord and Jacksun Cor.Dty .: history (rom the riles ot the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 rears ago. TEN VEABS AGO I'OUAl' v October 7. 1028 (It was Wednesday) Naw . York Yankees, with Bab Ruth hitting three runs, defeats 8t. Louis 10 to 5, In world cerles game. Floods damage mid west corn crops. Grand Dragon ot the Klan In In. dlana sentenced to life term tor death, ot girl, threatens "political exposure."' Mayor O. O. Alenderfer and Mrs. Alenderfer are leaving this afternoon for an extended trip In the east, to attend a wedding and a family re union at Columbus, Ohio. They will travel by way of New Orleans, Phila delphia, and New York and maka several stops. New regulations on double parking put in effect. Five ay objective of labor unlt President Coolldge urges "economy end leas governmental spending" la Boston speech. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY ' October 7. 1016 (It waa Saturday! Boston Americans defeat BrooWyi S to S. In first game of world series, with Shores and Mays pitching for the winners. German submarine crosses tha At lantic In 17 days, and lands at New port. President Wilson Issues appeal lot Independent progressive votes. Fred L. Heath has sold his store t Eagle Point. Mr. and Mrs. Will Brown spent Thursday In the city attending th Elks carnival. Senator Chamberlain due to visit city and valley next Monday, on campaign tour. PINE CENTRAL AVENUE n t