Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1936)
PAGi? SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1936 MedfordWTribune "BvrrynDc to Southern Oregon Band tbe Mail rrthooe" , . Dally Bxoept (Utnrday. Pubtutiw. by MUDVURD PRINTINO CO, ROBERT W. RUHU Brtlior CRM ESI R- OILSTKAP. Unfr. Entered u w30Dd-el mmtur t Med Cord. Orosoa. unrtM Aot of Mud S. dUBSCRIPTION RATES By Id all Id Artane Dally, on y4x i'ii - DallT. month Dclly. odo month .'k By Carrtar. lo Adanc Medford. land. JmUmovIUb. CtotrH PoinL PbMolx. Talon t Oold Bill cad on hithwoy. 'Dally, ono rar Dally, six montha Dally, ooo month A. J I tarma, oaah lo adaoco. OfflriaJ Popor of tha City ol Uedferd orrirJaJ Paper ol 4mkwin Coanty UJCMIIEU Of illK AriHUOIAI'KU fKJU. BocelrlnK ftTXilJ liwaed Wire HerrlM Tha Aaw tela tad Piaa i ioiu.1 an Utlad to tha um for publication ol all nw dlipataha orodltod to It or othtr wla eradltad to thlo pa par. and alao to tb local otwt pubHaharl haraln. All rtfhta for publication ol apaola dlapatohaa haraln ara alao raaarrad. UEUIitCH OF UNITED PRB8S MEMHKR OF AUDIT BUR BAD . OF CIRMMATIUNfl Advartialnc naprasantatlvea WE8T-HOMJDAV-MOOKNHBN CO. Offlcai In New Vork, Chicago, Datrolt. San Franclacf, hot Angela, Saattla. Portland. CD Ye Smudge Pot By Artliui Par. A former church sexton of Vienna. Austria, mi been arrested tor selling space In Heaven to peasants for 18 lei (about .5c) per square yard. At this rate, a grandstand seat to wit ness the end of the world should cost 14 (American money). - . , The bird shooting season opens to morrow. Hunters are urged to look as little as possible Ilka a Chinese pheaaont, also refrain from Imitating a rail fence, or 'No Hunting' sign. This Is the night citizens flock to the maglo lantern shows, to heckle th movie news reels of the Presi dent's and Governor Landon's speeches. A close observer can tell how Papa Is going to vote, by listen ing to the way Junior boos, In the front row. The US. supreme court denied an appeal of an upstate corporation from a 1000 award to a sailor, who allegedly contracted the Itch from the cook on a ship, operated by the defendant corporation. The award ... fnr mentAi Bniriilsh. physical pain, snd time lost scratching, It la thought. Tha high court did not scratch Its head, over tne opinion. t Wntrmnn. the veteran Ver- monter, announces his Intentions to vote for Lemke tomorrow, but In tne Orrst Showdown, Nov. 8 will vote for Landon. Mr. Waterman knows on which side of his bresd to pour his maple syrup. Signs of fall are plentiful. Includ ing farmers who brag how good the country suasnge, they are going to make, will taste. It Is only three weeks (minus) till election day. Borne feel they will not be able to last that long, and others fear they will not last long afterwards. Their feara are phony. All they have to do Is keep on breath ing, and the earth will keep on ro uting. S. Morris, the T-rock tiller is pray ing for rain, so he rn clean up and burn. I. Coleman, the smiling oil squirt haa moved to an Igloo a block up the street. The new site gives his boy John, a hill to fsll down and break his crown on. with neighboring Jacks and Jills. PIONEER 50FTIF.SI (Chanute. Kan.. Tribune) The Kansas pioneers lived herd lives. They had no fountain pens to leak on their fingers. No tele phones to ring while they were taking hatha. No motor cars to get fist tires or run out of gsso line. No radios to burn out tubes or be overcome by static. No brush enlesman to ring their doorbells. And no newnpapera to make them msd. It took real men to stand up under such hard ships. New York state now has. governors attached to carburetors, to regulate the flow of gavillne. and thus curb reckless drivers. A sheriff attaohed to the cork, to regulate the flow of whiskey, would help. A prosperity note from Los Angeles reveals people are "wasting more food" then In several years, a census of gsrbsge cans shows. There Is also evidence people are skinning each other with more gusto, than In IMS "Villagers testified In court they have seen, with their own eyes, a neighbor practicing witchcraft. Raid one: "I saw her heed shrink to the ire of my fist: her body become wry large and horns appeared on her head and she would walk on sll fours like an animal." (Oakland Tribune!. A pink elephant behind the rose bushes. teems to be missing. rr,liif- MiOtnp firon. SAl.EM. Oct. 14. ,fl'i-Traln and auto grade crossing m(shaps are show ing a marked lnrrease this year over 103S. FTank C. McColloch. state utll Ity commissioner. Indicated today In his report that IB railroad crossing accident hnd been recorded during September In Oregon. tl'ickimiham'e Ice Cream. CsnJy Party Specials The Crest 330 S Cent CtUN REPAIRS Esprrt gunsmith! Sims Bras 33 N fir dun sights Tune in KHL every "evening Mon day thru Friday a p m. Lie Mall Tribune Mntxit. MEMBER What Price, Politics? Today It la a pitiful spectacle to see Republican leader call this great program waste and extravagance tor they ara the same leaders who, when their own state or city or county was involved, were the first to run to Washington pleading tor federal aid. . Consistency la a word that cannot be found In the Republican campaign vocabulary and at that Inconsistency is a mild term to' apply to It. President Roosevelt In Denver address. .......... It is, very mild. President Roosevelt, knowing what he does, about his op ponent's record, BEFORE he became a candidate, not only as an enthusiastic supporter of the New Deal, but one of its out standing beneficiaries , , , certainly shows an admirable re straint in mentioning no names, and dismissing such a turnabout-face, as merely inconsistent. One docs not have to go back to the Greeks to find another term for it. ' But the president does not go back, refuses to indulge in personalities, dismisses the spectacle as a pitiful one, and goes on with his campaign, ing to the line, letting the chips NO one knows better than the president the hundreds of millions of dollars that were poured out for the benefit of Kansas, at the urgent insistence of the present Republican can didate when he was governor of that state. From the very outset Governor Landon ardently supported the Roosevelt relief program, sent wire after wire asking for funds and still more funds, and pointed with pride to the fact that while Kansas stands 24th in population, only 14 out of the 48 states, received more federal money than his state did! Now he terms the relief program that made this possible, "waste, extravagance," and honeycombed with political manip ulation and partisanship. , Only two years ago, John Hamilton, Governor Landon's cam paign manager, and present chairmn of the Republican national committee, emphatically denied there had been any Democratic partisanship in the distribution of federal funds in Kansas. We quote : ' "I think, therefore, that there la nothing In the record of the last two years, to Indicate that Mr. Roosevelt or his assistant have distributed federal funda upon a purely partisan basis." Wlirtn nf hie rffnllnKt. fnHornl funIn (ttnpfj)1 to nonf. into hi'u state, Governor London publicly "I desire to acknowledge In a tangible way the appreciation ot the people of my state of the courage with which President -Roosevelt has attacked the depression. It there la any way in . which a member of that species thought to be extinct, a Re publican governor of a middle western state, can aid him In the fight I now enlist for the duration of the wax." "For tlio duration of the warl" According to Governor Lan don's own statement that war is unemployment, KansHs is still idle citizens work, but Mr. Landon though still governor of Kansas,' is now the G. 0. P. candidate for president, and has cancellod his enlistment. . . A LSO only two years ago, certain Democrats of Kansas were accusing Governor Lnndon of not spending federal funds properly, but using them to build up a political machine; white washed rocks spelling the nsme "Landon" being distributed by relief workers along the highway. Said Governor Landon: . "Well, 11 the Democrat won't stand up for the relief program and It administration I will do It for them. I say that con sidering the problems they have met, they have done a good Job, and I am glad to have cooperated with them." Also only two yenrs ago Governor Laudon sent wire after wire for more federal funds, praised the way in which Hopkins was distributing the funds, and backed this up with a letter to the president, from which thV following is an extract: "This civil work program la one ot the soundest, moat constructive policies of your administration and I can not urge too strongly Its continuance." What a eliRngo has conic over the spirit of Governor Lan don's dreams! Oh yes wo know it's politics, and we are nearing the close of a spirited presidential campaign. As candidate of the opposing party, one could not expect Governor Landon, to stsnd four square by I ITS renord as President Roosevelt is doing and say anything good, either about, bis opponent or his administration. The Liberty Ieaguers figuratively speaking would tear him limb from limb. But IS IT necessary, from the standpoint of partisanship is it even good politics, for such an enthusiastic supporter of the New Deal and one who materially and politically profited so much by it, to go out of his way, not only to repudiate it and his own record, but to bitterly condemn it, not ouly as waste, vtravapnnce and partisan politics, but as a program, that if continued will not only be false to our cherished demo emtio traditions, but render impossible the American way of life! XE don't think it. is. And we have a sufficiently high re- gard for Governor Lnndon 's true liberality of spirit, and genuine sense of fair-play, to believe that only the exigencies of his position, and the overwhelming pressure of the Old Guard that surrounds him, has persuaded him to believe otherwise. President Roosevelt calls his position "pitiful". It is, A stronger term might be applied, but we believe that the domi nant emotional reaction is one of pity. When, ANY man, whom one as an individual respects and admires, is unable, because of eircumstunces too strong for him to combat to be true to himself, then ono is moved more to sorrow than to anger Shakespeare told the whole story when hs wrote: "To thine own self be true And It roust follow as the night the day Thou canst not then be false to any man." Wo have no quarrel with and policies of the Roosevelt, administration. There they are, a mutter of record, definite and clear cut. This country is big enough and we hope always will be for honest differences of opinion. But when a man any man accepts them in principle, profits by them, and then for the sake of getting votes, re pudiates them, not only in detail but in theory, we agree with the president inconsistency is a mild term to apply to it! The first clrculam! library In America was established In rhtls delphla In W3I. Thorn js Hooker, horn In 1JS. founded the town ut Hsrtford and the oolouy of Oonnectlcua. consistent, constructive, cleav fall where they may. declared: still going on, there is still vast using federal funds to give its those who oppose the principles Katmal national monument In Alaska Is a vast wild life ie.erre A, 313 miles in eitvnt aeorjl' rid ither south m l.irm era are un.teiukli Iste v.etabio planting to efjtet drought lease. 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 Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. VITAMINS VERSOS Convalescence from lingering UI-i ness Is always gradual. The medlca j profession Is slowly but surely recov- I ering from tne a d e n otdaatomj I mania which be-' came pandemic1 early in the cen tury. T we n t years ago tha fever raged. The Brass Specialists of America, . un der the magtc device P.AO.S, fac-slmlle or Im itation of a Brit ish institution for a time piled phenomenal business. Teachers, nurses, social service workers et aJ canvassed the highways and byways. corraled ohlldren of the peasants. trundled them off In bus-loads to the "clinic" or "dispensary," where the eminent throat specialists guillo tined, snared and scraped out ade noids and tonsils wholesale. The go getters required only an hour or two In the environment of the great spe cialist to gain the uncanny power to size up any class or group of chil dren and pick out likely victims for the trip to the "clinic" Just from that stupid "adenoid" lock on the countenance or the lnattentlveness of the luckless child, rhls racket is still worked in a small way in com munities where health boards or school boards employ nurses and per mit or compel the nurses to diagnose and prescribe treatment. The poli ticians who do this know the riff raff haven't the spirit to resent it. The nurses serving as little tin doc tors try to exercise discretion In send ing not to parents advising them what Johnny or Mary needs in the way of medical treatment. Children do sometimes need re moval of tonsils and adenoids, but this Is only rarely necessary or Justi fiable where the condition la simply enlargement, hypertrophy, overgrowth of the lymphoid or adenoid tissue which composes the feudal tonsils and tha pharyngeal or post-nasal tonsil (commonly called adenoid). In the height of the craze for re moving tonsils and adenoids the Brass Specialists of America conceiv ed a weird notion that lymphoid tis sue, of which the fauclal and pharyn geal tonsils are composed, should be removed whenever it Is found pres ent. This notion was great for the wholesale tonsil and adenoid removal business, hut not so good for the victims of the craze. The notion still persists in the mind and practice of too many specialist; they betray It when they prate on the Importance of "complete" removal of the tonsils where the removal, drainage, disin NEW YORK. Oct. 14. Trsrklnit down lost manuscripts seems a pro saic pursuit. Yet it consumes men of great bril liance and often sends them to unheard-of cor ners of the world, Some times to face death. Man- llaM-Hrtsl hM 61 kV'M XU4 KK'-ivjl way of boDblnR JsYCj1h3i un In unexpected places aftr hope Is abandoned. A New York publishing house Is shortly to Is sue a flirt edition of Boswell. Dr. Johnson's bloftrsphrr. It U ft "Jour nal of a Voyage to the Hebrides,' complete, and not the present well known fragment. It was a part of tixo Malshlde papers found recently In a croquet set box at Malshlde Cfistle, Scotland. Then there was Hugh Walpolo's discovery of the lost dUrlen of Sir Walter Scott In a bookshop In San Pranflsco. And as strange la news the long-searohed-for papers of Father Kino, the Jesuit explorer on the pacific coast, have been sold for an Immense sum to the University of California. The sale waa effected through Jake Jtaltlln, the Los Angeles book dealer. Vltlln, dark. wiry, athletic. Is the Dr. A. 8. Rosenbach of the west, a former cowboy and authority on Mexlcana. The search for the Kino ma., forgotten for centuries, ran through Mexico. Spain and Kngland and for three years it hsd lain In Zeitltn'a safe. T used to ae him, a veneraN blue bloused chasuer with sn Ole Bill mustache, hailing taxis and running Inglorious errands for patrons of the Opera Comlque and Poeoardr mir rored cafe arrow the way. One re members because he was so sweeping ly magnificent In bowing and mur muring merels for tips. On a bench along an upper Broad wv mall the other day I spotted him. sunning himself with two glnjrhamy rose buds: grandchildren, one presumed PfisMnjtr I smiled and said! Tare Opera Comlque!" He replied with one of those over-done Willi Howard shrugs: "Pare Jamais plus! Pare est mortf Add word coins: Strickland Oilman, In speaking of a recent ac colade he received In print, eon eludes: "And now all the echolaud boys will b coming along with 'Me tool' H Etho,aud Is by way of being a honey. I notlc the ion -established Vir ginia Pope bird hospital la now lo rated In mv old neighborhood In West 73d street, ror many year It has applied splints lo broken legs and wings of canaxiea, ova birds acd Hi iLsiljl Brady, M.D. ADENOID DISEASE fection or obliteration of a small area of Infection In the tonsil Is all that Is Indicated or warranted. As the hideous tonsil -adenoid -ectomy craze recedes Into history, competent physicians take a saner view of the significance of an ex cess of lymphoid tissue in the throat and post-nasal space of the child The better physicians today neither suggest nor sanction surgical attack on such lymphoid overgrowth except in comparatively rare instances where nose, throat or eustachian tube (to ear) Is so obstructed as to menace' health and development. Instead, such children receive (1) their place In the sun sun baths, tan, or at least ultraviolet light on naked skin; (3) adequate dally rations of vita mins, particularly vitamin A and vita min D. Under such treatment, the lymphoid hypertrophy spontaneously returns to normal. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Knock Knock. Could you tell me what knocka lepsy la, what causes It acd Is there any cure for It? . . . (Mrs. H- H.) Answer Narcolepsy Is a form of epilepsy In which the, spells or seiz ures are lapses of consciousness with out spasms or convulsions. It Is usu ally called petit mal. The lapse of conselounnera may be for only a few seconds or for longer periods. Causu unknown. No cure known. Geographic Tongue. You suggested Iron for geographic tongue. How about vitamin therapy? It li certainly annoying to have my mouth constantly burning or sore . . . (McC. T.) Answer It would be helpful, prob ably, to take not only a course of iron ss Instucted in booklet "Blood and Health" (copy for ten cents and stamped envelope) but also some Ir radiated yeast tablets dally. SOre tongue la a common symptom of in sufficient vitamin a. Arwnlc poisoning. What are the symptom of arsenic poisoning? . . . (L. L. O.) Answer The patient should tell the doctor his spmptoms. Some of the symptoms of chronic arsenic poison ing, often not recognized v are garlic like odor of skin, sweat and even the breath, recurring eczema, waxy pal lor, red Injected eyelid linings; puz zling attacks of neuritis, patches o! anesthesia or loss of sensation in skin, peculiar weakness of one or an other muscle group, tingling sensa tions, foot drop. (Copyright, 1936, John P. Dtlle Co.) fed Note: Peikiin wishing t communlrate wttb Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D. soft El rami no. Heverly Hhls. Calif. the like and treated various aliments of cockatoos, parrots and such. Now and then some Good Samaritan finds a sparrow that fell along the streets and carries It to Miss Pope's to be hospitalized and for which he gladly pays the fee. There's s strange understanding among birds for those with distinc tive tenderness for them, as members ! of Audobon societies well know. Birds will sight a feeder In the parks aa the gull sights a liner at sea be fore binoculars do and flock out to meet h Ira or ber. I am told th at when the original Mlsa Pope went Into the public squares or parks the birds somehow singled her out and bob-bobbexi along In ber wake. Clemenceau loved birds, and Strang spcln.ena. Including a crow with one snow white wing, came to nest st his exl le . Leon ard Me rrl ek was a magnet for strange ptgeona that came up to him without fear. In cub reporter days I lived In a. seamen'a waterfront rooming bouse where a poll parrot was greatly be loved by the landlady. It squawked the rest of us $3.50 a week lodgers out of our beauty sleep, but we some how grew fond of It. The bird's end was tragedy with a Poesque touch. It followed the landlady around on her household chores, and one eve ning, in letting down a folding bed, she stepped backward on her pet. There was an almost human scream and the bird shrieked: "Poor Polly is dying! And Polly was, with a broken neck. Bird dealers say that scar several years sgo over a dis ease scientists say is spread by the poll parrot has almost completely stopped the sale of them. And there are some bird shops that do not have them on hand. One of my Scotch grandfather's stock stories concerned an escaped parrot that was up in a tree near It home. An Irishman, having never seen parrot and admiring It as a trangely plumed bird, climbed up to see If he could catch It. As he near ed. th parrot squawked: "Go chase yourself I" And the Irishman, lifting bit cap. backed away with: "I'm sorry. Bejabers. I thought you a burr-rd l" Communists Foes Are Buried Alive LANCHOW. China. Oct. 14. ,"JP) tnvacllnff Communists burled alive a rovernment army oetachment in re taliation for killing mnr. than a hun dred of their folio wra, advice from the district southeast of Ivnchow said today. The government troops ambushed th Communist, but later were over powered, the report -aid. Numerous wealthy Chines com mitted suicide to cvold possible cap ture for ransom, the advice declared CORVALLI9. Oct. 24 (.How ard PugU, American born Japanese Undent, became president of the Oregon State college agricultural en gineering clutv He -va elected sec ond vice-president of the national student section of th Amei.can So ciety of Agricultural Enameer !.wl UuQuner at th nation! convention. Comment of the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS lOMMUNTBT Russia charges fascist nations (specifically Portugal) with helping the fascist rebels in the Spanish civil war and hints broadly that if this help isn't stopped she will come to the aid of the commun ist government of Spain. That, of course, la sensational news, and gets big headlines. GERMANY and Italy (both fascist ruled) are mentioned In connec tion with the Russian charges of help extended to the fascist Spanish rebels. Whereupon Dlno Grandi, Italian ambassador to Great Britain, arises In hli place In London and charges that Russia has shipped aircraft, guns and ammunition to the communist government In Spain in three soviet ships. What Grandi charges is that Rus sia has been dolng'the very thing she complains of others doing. npHAT, of course, la nothing un- usual. In the game of diplo macy, each nation considers Itself pure and white and everything It does holy, but when the same things are done by other nations they are scandalous and terrible. In their re lations with each other, nations are coldly and brutally selfish.) THIS new situation that has arisen has possibilities of serious trou ble. Europe Is aligned In two war ring camps communism on one side and fascism on the other. Condi tions over there are set on a hair trigger, and almost anything might happen. About the beBt we can do Is to hope that nothing will. IN thla country we are In the midst of an active and bitter campaign. Charges and counter-char gea are be ing hurled right and left. People are all stirred up already, and will be much more so by the morning of November 3. But at least in this country the impending battle Is one of ballots, rather than bullets, and when the votes are counted and the verdict Is known It will be accepted more or less cheerfully and we will all buckle down to the Job of doing the best for ourselves we can under the cir cumstances. That is the American system of settling Issues, and It Is the best sys tem yet devised on earth. In com parison with what la going on in Europe, It is nothing short of won derful. Let us hope this country never de parts from lt present system of set tling differences. Communications Delay Hunting Season To the Editor: Government official figures ahow that approximately six million per sons In the U. S. take out hunting 11- cennea annually. Hunting season consist of a few weeka each fall, during which, men feeling so Inclined may go into the woods and kill a limited supply of fresh meat, but should be called he 11 -raising season Instesd. Judging by the dally news, nearly aa many man have been shot In Oregon this season, as deer. Now let us see how much It costs the taxpayers of this state for allow ing one-twentieth of our population to run wild In the woods for a few weeks each fall, alaughti'.ng each other and most of them returning with no meat at al. Millions of doilars worth of the finest forest in the U. S that can not be replaced, nave gone up In smoke; whole towns have been burn ed to the ground and hurdred of people rendered homeless: man lives have been lost; thousands of dollars spent in fighting the resistless flames and untold damage haa been done to peaceful, inoffensive c tlrens over a wide area. What a farce this hunting has turned out to be. When I came West In 1876. there was game everywhere and everyone hunted, but they didn't shoot at each other In the woods aa they do now. Plenty of men we shot but not from wing mistaken for wild game. For a f".t, i have read of more hunters siot right here in or?on this last season, than I heard of in the first fortv years I spent knocking around in the West. What i the answer? Are hunters becoming color-blind? Is astigmatism becoming prevalent of lat veara? No man who ,s unable to distinguish a deer from a human being at from one hundred to three hundred yards, should be granted a license to hunt Engineers on our transcontinental railroads are required to dlMnulsh and correctly name EIGHT different shadea of green jVne. That u real eyesight. For years In the West I Md a coat of dead-grass color (called the in visible color), to hunt tn. it would b no less than quick suicide to go Into the woods these ,aya with a garment like thM, j have heud much argument that a lot of thee destruc tive lire were set by incendlarle and Communists. Be that as It may. it is a fact tint if here was no hunt ing season It would do awsv w tn the danger that aaye virete'u when a careless mob start running loese :n the woods and t her lore would not present tb aaoia excuse to iocea- diaries and Communists, as Is the case now. The state would make an enormous saving to cancel the hunting season entirely, even If It were compelled to buy fresh meat and donate It tz these careless, nalf-bUnd hunters as a bribe to stay at home. At the rate our forests are being denuded by log ging operation, the cutting of bil lions of Christmas trees and Hunting season fires, there soon will be no ioresta left and then what? Have we forgotten what happened to the buffalo? But why should nlneteen twentleths of our citizens uffer dam age, death and devastation and face a vast amount of unnecessary ex pense, because the other twentieth wants to raise hell for a few weeks each fall. Is it worth It? Anyway, why not delay the open ing of hunting season until after the first good rain? J, C. REYnOlaDS. Applegate, Oct. U. (Continued from. Page One.) Steiwcr's, which produced Al Smith and Hoover on the stsnd, Senator Jim Reed's which excluded Vare and Frank Smith from -he senate, etc., etc. Out the window ha come a be lle ve-it-or-not that the wul reason the committee la quiet Is that It has not discovered anything worth telling. This Is the purest campaign on rec ord. It Is said. While considerable money Is being spent, it la going, as far as the committee can prove, into open promotional channels. This la at least relatively ..rue. Main efforts of ihe committee have been devoted to running down er roneous rumors. For instance, Senator Guffey submitted a7 affidavit of employe coercion, but Senitor Aus tin announced only one reierrea w this current campaign. The William Hard charges, for the first five days, had not been received the committee aookesman Insisted day by day. There la probably a carpet un against the door on tne insiae, or. more likely, tnere Is no one be hind the door. The major Issue In one precinct of the farm belt is ald to center around the question of why President Roosevelt does not get up before 9 a. m- A crowd of 4.000 or 5.000 farmers turned out to see him at Osceola. Iowa, on his trip, but nc waa not up. It waa hard for the farmers to ap preciate that, because many of them had done half a cay's v.-ork before coming to the train, some driving as far as forty and tlfty milea One explanation la that there arc only about two Democrat In Os ceola county, but the real explana tion dlsclosea the oret of Mr. Roose velt's unrivaled &unptgnlng energy. He never arise until about a. m. He awakena much earlier, but has breakfast tn bed. nalng 'he papers. It is White House custom for his secretaries to gather around after ward and plan the presidential day. He follows the same practice on trips, which accounts for the fact that he keeps trcah while those around him wear down. . ' The sound autoriay on Father Coughlln' money view, performed without personal feeling by Mgr John A. Ryan of Catholic university, repre sent generally th jl-wpolnt of most churchmen. Mgr. rtyan la a disting uished teacher whose words carry more dlspaaslonat authority than some which have oeen leveled against Pather Coughlln. Most political authorities agree that Father Coughlln haa been cut down Inch or inch, and forecast a future for him a a singer midget. Siinrcm. court attachea have seen a circular, sent out apparently by an Insurance Droaerair nouse. in York, offering to Insure business men sialnst chansea In the supreme court during the next four years. PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. 14 Knight of Pythla and Pythian Sister at their annual convention here elected Louie Bennett, Lebanon, grand chan cellor. Frank H. Mytlnger." Pendleton, trrand prelate: Robert A. Bennett, Portland, grand vlie-chancehor, Wal ter O. Qleason. Portland, grand keep er of the records and seal; A. J. Rose, Portland, grand mss'r of sxchequer; Irvln Moss, La Grande, grand master-at-arms: Joe Csnnon. Athens, grand inner guard: Chris Rasmuasen. Ban don, grand outer uard: John Foote, St. Helens, grsnd trustee Join ETHELWYN B HOFFMANN'S Hosiery Club Every 13th pair tree Tune m KSL every evening. Mon- Jy thru Fr-ldsy. 8 pm. Relief from Rheumatic Pain in 10 Days or Money Bach! IN the Orest War, an Army Doctor saw for himself the hopeless, wretched misery caused by rheu matic pun. He resolved to devote every ounce of his strength to those I who suffered. AT LAST HE FOt'ND !A FORMULA THAT . REALLY wop.fcrc This formula known as wmiimj' K.CXf Cftaywuad hu helped Flht 'oTime o Sledford and Jackson Coontj history from the files ol the Mall Tribune 10 and 8U Tears ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAX October 14, 1926 (It was Thursday) Queen of Rumania to pass through city November 8. rniiTt. rule, that ChlCSSO School girl csn't wear knickers to school. Quail season opens tomorrow, but hunters are reminded pheasant season doe not open until Sunday. .Talr.nvlllM rlt.lzens to launch. campaign against removal of county seat to Medford. Medford high school to play Klam-i ath rails Saturday. -A State orders ban on wormy ap- plea. Oremm State to olay California at Berkeley Saturday. Irrigation policy of state hit In port. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ' October 14, 1916 ' : , (It was Saturday! Mr. and Mrs. Weldon P. Blddlo en tertain at a Dutch dinner at their Kenwood orchards home. Mrs. R. P. Antle entertains ttia Wednesday Bridge club. The first autumn meeting of the Drama league and a review of the play "Kindling" Is held. Attorney George Roberts reads a role. A. J. Hsnby Is named secretary ot the Schoolmasters club. "Republican Mother" rebukes edi tor of the Sun In Mall Tribune. The Sun editor Is silenced. Attorneys W. E. Phlpps subscrlir( $10 to the Democratic cause. Ye Poets Corner Reflections (By Lymsn A. Frlt2) Every time I see myself In the looking glass ' I find some Imperfection. I haven't eny "clsss." My hair needs the barber. I ought to have a ahave: And I should have a brand new suit. But what' the use to rave. I thought I had a dollar saved, (I hoped that It would grow) I loved that dollar dearly. But at last It had to go. And that's the way with everything; My dreams come out amiss, My girl gave mo a hearty Blap When I thought I'd get a kiss. Future Farmers ' Go To Convention SALEM, Oct. 14 (If)--Four future U farmera of America lenders left today, for the national convention at Kan sas City with Warren E. Craotree, ag ricultural .instructor at Silv-rton. The five will travel by automobile. ' The bo making :.e trip ar George Justice of .aiterpr.se. state presldenti Robert Jf.iltr. of Clover dale, vice-president; Raymond Koocu of Enterprise and I&ck Looney of Al bany, selected as outstanding mem bers In the state the pust real. ' Portland businessmen are financing the three-weeks' trio i Named to Faculty r PORTLAND. Ore.. Oct. 14. (TP. r. Hance F. Haney nna been named the faculty of the University of Ore. gon medical school It was revealed here today. Dr. Haney Is assistant professor of physiology He received hi PhJ). degree from the University of Wisconsin snd a decree in medi cine from the University of Chicago. t i SAVINGS Overcome difficulties. t A Conquer distress. i Stlmulste ambition, Favor tranquility,, And often found a fortune. (Many a nickel makes n mlckle.) FARMERS AND FRUITGROWERS BANK. ' ' Always aafe before aa well as. after being a member of 1 a FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION. FUEL OIL. any amount. Call 1184. Petroleum Heat & Burner Co. .TtS oVM ...r t lb' com' ,nvn' ttrae .am en" -rttV,"- t ,ran ttW - -.mr,"' .-.4 jer.il thousands of suffering men and women. It reache rheumatic pain f ROM THE INSIDE Through the blood stream. WILLIAMS R.U.X. Compound Is featured, now. t the Heath Drug Store. North Central st Burt this treatment todayand IF YOU ARE NOT RELIEVED IN 10 DAYS the druggist will refund our moneyl 4v. Nllllllllll 1 ?fflTTT uudllllllljllllllll V