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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1936)
PAGE sre "M-EDFOTID MATL TRTBTTNE, MTTDFOKD, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEiTBER 1, 1936. MDFORDrTBIBUN "Everyone Id Baurtiern OreffOB Readi tha Mall Tribune" Dally Except Saturday Published ty URniiTlRn PRINTINO CO. 2S-27.5 N. Fir 8U Phona Tl BOBBHT W, KUHL, Editor ERNEST R. OILSTRAP. faoaaar. An Independent Nawspapar VtrmA mm i-nni1.Plall 4T)ttr St Mftd ford, Oregon, under Act of March I. l7i SUBSCRIPTION RATES Km fnll In ArtvillOe Dally, ona yr 22 Dally, alx month .7 Dally, on roomd jv rrrir. in Advanca Med ford, i land, Jacksonville. Cant rat Point, Phoenix, Talent. Gold WU. n on hlirhuivi. Dally, ona year M.n Daily, alx monthi Dally, ona monin Atl tarim, caah In adfance. . ntflclHl Paptr oi the City of Medford Official I'liner of Jocltaon County MF.MHKK OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS lorrlvlnv Full lited Wlrs Serrlca Tha Aaanclated Praia la axcluilvaly an. titled to the um (or publication of all nwa riitmtchi credited to It or other- wltte credited In thla paper, and ftJeo to tha local ntwi published herein. All rlffbta for publication of apeclaJ dlspatchea herein are aiao reaervaa. MEMBER Oa UNITED PRESS MEM DIOR OK AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Advertising Repreeutatlvea WEbT-HOI.LIDAT-UOOENSEN CO. Offlcea In New York. Chicago, Detroit. Ban FrancUco, Loa Angela. Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Tha sir was bracing Monday s. m. and braced a goodly portion of the population right up agatnat a atove. a a a Rival pension groupa met at Salem Saturday night. One unit favored 200 per month penelona, and the other aectlon 80 per month. In atead of compromising and splitting the difference at $140 per month, the $200 unit departed when the hat was paused to pay for the hnll. Plana and apeclflcatlona for Utopia should be on a more neighborly harveatlng of the free-will offering. a a "ORET wool overcoat, with brown leather gloves in pocket,, found near Lutheran church Thanksgiving ntght. Owner Identify at Bulletin offloa." (Wantad Bend Bulletin) A clue that a alnner repented near the scene of Mi crime. a ' WE TJNK1NDEKT cut. rcnrvallli flawtta-Tlnies) "The deal also threatens to put the President's daughter In as 'women's editor,1 She has had the aame experience In the newspaper gams as one of our country cor respondents." e t tlll another defeated Oregon can did at for high office hints he will run again tn 1040 and 1043-44-46-48-60, ad lib. see dtlnens throughout the nation are winning bete they can drink a quart of whisker without alopplng. but dropping dead before they can get to their autoe. a a A Portland Industry Involved tn s labor dispute resumed operations with the homes of the workers under po lice guard. A number of house -wive are reported to have sneaked out and hung up the week's waahlng without a riot. a a ol pr.nniL" dollar, (NY. VVnrld-Telegram "Buying, selling, building, pro moting, klrklng up the dust of Industry and finance: running a Shoestring up to a IS, 000 ,000 .000 empire and then down again; years of hustling with no hob bles except hustling: no time for contemplation: Just business and mora buslneaa, and for what- sudden death before 00. "That Is the thumbnail blog- ' rsphy of the Van Swerlngen brothers, who both within a year have gone on that Journey from which no traveler return, leav ing behind for others to worry about the tangled skein of affairs which now symbolizes their am bition to be big and powerful and rich." a One of the mib-Older Olrls on a hunting trip to Klamath county shot a duck. It haa not been revealed what she waa aiming at. a a a Premier Mussolini of Italy sprang a surprise yesterday "hy marching his cabinet and chamber of deputies across Rome on the double-quick." All were winded but Mussolini. The Governor should try this one on the next seaalon of the legislature, when they get to acting tip. a The T.C.I A.C.A.O. (two-can-llve-aa-cheap-as-one, haa been formed among the married students at the UofO. This will probably lead to the formation of the T.C.FA.C.A.O. ltwo-ean-feel-a-chenp-asons,, e a A college profeaaor announces "no American breathes, or ever breathed" who had not told educators how to teach school. The aame goes for coaching a font ball team, and run ning a newspaper. e a C. Wig Ashpole, the cowman, hs a new pair of hand-rmhrolderrd boola. Thry make him limp like he has been plowing tn them. e e a Th e wea t her con t. nues f I ne for farm era to talk about how they would like to plow. KIWANIS CLUB LEADER VICTIM OF MONOXIDE PORTItAMTi, Dec. 1. ifr rumes from a running motor brought ac cidental death to John Wisdom, 45. president of tile Portland Klwanls club, as he worked over hla own car In the garage at hla home. Wisdom was a nntlve of Baker. C.oa.n tnnj to. Too Late to Cla i ally Ads to 10 p. m. France Wants To Pay Up A CCORDING to press dispatches from Paris, Prance wishes to pay its war debt to the United States. The new agreement, it is stated, would take the form of an affirmation of the sanctity of signed engagements. France owes the United States approximately $4,000,000,000, including principal and interest. No payments have been made since 1032. . The new agreement, would arrange for payment in 20 annui ties. France declares the United States is asked to give nothing in return, Premier Blum is ready to negotiate at once without bargaining. ' Further quoting press dispatches: "France hopes the debt agreement will coincide with other political and economic agree ments destined to consolidate peace and restore world com merce by reducing quotHs and lowering tariff barriers." Well this is something new under the sun! e Ever since our war debtors defaulted, it was assumed the war debts were as dead as old King Tut. France with its well known disposition, to drive a aharp bargain where filthy lucre is concerned, was the last of pur debtors expected to bring up the matter of payments, and open up its purse Btrings, without demanding a "quid pro quo" on the dotted line. What does it all mean anywayt The probable answer is, the "quid pro quo" is there, but not expressed. War threatens in Europe. If and when war breaks out, France will not only want the sympathy of the United States, but financial help. At the last session of the congress however, Senator Hiram Johnson, put through a measure, a loan from this country to any- foreign country, that had re pudiated its war debt to the United States. The resumption of debt payments by France would put it in the clear as far as the provisions This is probably t ho dusky also the milk in the cooonnut..! Incredible-But Here It Is HERE ifi another interesting press ilispntch from abroad Ac-OAi-rlmcf in Tinnrlnn nnrrpannni'lnnt. of thta TTnifprl PrrSR Premier Stanley Baldwin nnt night warned King Edward, that the government and parliament are prepared to oppose his mar riage to that charming and spirited American divorcee, Mrs. Wally" Simpson. To which the British soverign pressed the royal equivalent of 4,Go jump in the lake. am going to wed whom I please, come what may!" Whereupon Sir Claude Schuster, permanent secretary of the Lord Chancellors office, handed cabinet, expressing a legal view Mrs. Simpson without the government's consent. That brings the matter to what might be called an impasse. The U. P. correspondent concludes: "King Edward. Is determined to marry Mra. Simpson, regard leaa of the consequences, offlclala believed today. They see two poaslbllltlca: "I. That the King will appeal to the people to sanction the marriage In defiance of the cabinet and the 'aristocracy "3. That King Edward will abdicate, and marry the former Baltimore girl, the throne going to hla brother the Duke of York" SO what T Well, as the same dispatch declares, the British Labor party also opposes the marriage, the first alternative would hardly meet with much success. How about tho second t This would be a history-malting, tradition-shattering step to take, and yet when one comcf to think about it, quite in keeping with the entire performance from the start. Talk about your "STORIES," your fantastic movie scenar ios from Hollywood! had this extraordinary romance been taken as the basis for ono of Warner Brothers musical extrava ganzas, every critic in the country would have dismissed the plot, as too incredible, to be taken with any seriousness. But the King Edward-Mrs. Simpson situation IS serious, and it takes no deep student of modern England, and its far filing, but unstable empire, to appreciate that fact. EVER since Queen Victoria, the British Empire has been held tnt'flthpr w n oninmnn ilovotion mid lovaltv to the reiir..- ing house of Windsor, and the foundations of this house, bave rested upon what might be termed, the solid moral principles, of middle class respectability. King Edward VII had his so called pcccidillos, his stage entrance favorites, but they were always carefully subordinated to bin duties as the ruling mon arch, and never allowed to obtrude or interfere with matters of state. The present King's grandfather was always the King first, and tbe man about town, second, and discreetly incog nito. King Edward VIII, has bad other ideas ideas for that matter which are to his credit, but are not so regarded when matters of state, and royal tradition, are considered. As a re sult he has been placed in tbe unfortunate position of reversing his grandfather's code, placing his personal inclinations first, and his responsibilities as bead IVyiORE important that that perhaps, when the future of the Empire is considered, the present King, is, and always has been, tremendously popular. Added to bis great personal charm, he has endeared himself to the masses by showing at all t'mes. in word and deed, a genuine interest, in their welfare and bet terment. OUT if because of his wilful tendencies, bis insistence on he ing himself first mid the King afterward, his scorn of pre tence, Jiypocricy and cant, he should adopt the second alterna tive and abdicate the throne, there would be no one to ade quately fill his place. The British Empire, we feHr, woul I be like a ship launched upon a turbulent and stormy sea, with no! firm or competent hand in the pilot house, no one to hold1 either the people of the empire or its constituent parts to-, tret her. I In short, this nma.iug romance, between the reigning King, of England, and an American girl from Baltimore, Maryland, ( now in br late thirties and twice divorced, MAY mark the beginning of that tragedy.-- frequently predicted, but just as frequently, ttiiliie.; to come to pass, the decline and full of the British Empire, which would make impossible of this measure are concerned. gentleman in the woodpilw and is reported to have flatly ex a memorandum to the British that the King can not marry of Great Britain second. Personal Health Service By William Signed letter, pertaining to perianal bealtb and nyrlene, not to disease (llagnuili or treatment, wllj be answered by Dr. Brad; It a (tamped. Mil-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters sbould be brief and written In Ink Owing to tbe large number ol letters received only a few can be answered No repjv can be made to querlea not conforming to Instructions. Address ur. wiuiaro Brad;. 26S El Camlno. Beverly HlUs, Calif. OXYGEN FOB In a talk about emergency reme dies for angina (accent on the an, not on the gl) the other day I men tioned that pres ent view of the Immediate cause of the attack anoxemia, as phyxia. Insuffic ient oxygen to the heart muscle but suggested only two emer gency remedies, namely, absolute quiet, standing, sitting or lying down; and nitro glycerin. A number of sufferers from an gina pectorlea hae hastened a thing no angina patient should ever do to tell me that If I ever have the malady I'll find that the first rem edy Is superfluous; one Instinctively remains immobile while the seizure is . on. I had a vague notion that victims of angina pectoris are usually pretty quiet, but I sought to Impress on the reader'a mind the desirability of avoiding even the effort of walking or sitting up or standing up or talk ing, for every bit of effort increases the demand of the heart muscle for oxygen In spite or the grave deficit. , Another emergency remedy which Is extraordinarily efficacious not only In tho attack of angina pectoris but also in the still graver coronary thrombosis or occlusion, is oxygen. Not oxygen Inhaled from an oxygen tank, although that may be valuable supplementary treatment, but oxy gen injected into the subcutaneous tissues of the belly wall or flank. Inhalations of oxygen from a tank are helpful provided the patient can breathe well; but in coronary throm bosis and many other grave Illnesses the breathing la likely to be very shallow and little oxygen reaches the blood capillaries In the atr-cclls of the lungs. With simple apparatus which any up-to-date physician may carry In his emergency bag. It Is now possi ble to administer to any patient any- 1 where at any time a pint of oxygen : aubciitaneously. The blood avidly plcka up oxygen so administered, and often the patient shows and feels the beneficlent effects even be fore the Injection la finished. Dr. O. B. Simons said, in "Clinical Medicine and Surgery": "One point of inject QQMclnfyre NEW YORK, Dec. 1, There's nn ac tivity New York, Including even hec t.c Broadway, docs not know when ' the metro polls sinks Into lta heaviest early mor n I ng rleep. This Is along the West street water front known as Tho Produce Market. It be pins to boll shortly after midnight. The three- and four - a t o r 1 e d brick buildings with their wood en porticos, among the oldest In town, supacst those money old timers along the levee front In river villages. It Is the atea'a task to deliver to New York Its dally supply of vegetables. And It coes with a bang! There's a fascinating bouquet of ejvrthy aromas for the visitor onlona. apples, melons and potatoes. And there are dazzling pyramids of orangee. peaches and other fruits crated In geometrical galaxy waiting to be trundled to hotels and retail stores from Battery to Bronx. All about Is a steady spurt of good UHtured billingsgate from robust truckmen. A Jousting repartee much In the manner of the blue-blouaed porters at Lea Hulls In Parla at dawn. And at sun-up the many sating hutches and lunch wagons do a land office rush In coffee and hamburger. A radio reviewer tells m Fred Allen puts more elbow grease into hla weekly skits than any other broadcaster. Save for six week vaca tlon in Maine, he becomes a city re cluse. He works 10 hours a day. delving for new gags, new twists. ttuatlons. A task In which he Is aided by his wife, Portland Hoffa. They are never seen In the .Mtau nnt where actors and radio celebri ties gather, and about two movies a week are their relaxation. It has been some time since I met up for a gsbfeet with an old bak yonder friend about persons and things until yesterday. I thought as I listened and exchanged views how the scenes shift In the report of this person and that. It is, aftet nil. the old drama of life. Our Dl.'kena and Thackerays saw It all but, bt-tter than the rest, set It down In enduring volumes. Ups and downs, and sun shine and. paraphrasing Major uwc. around and around she goes and where she stop nobody knows. All v have to do is to sit quietly and enjoy the ride. No um growing weary. There's a long rest at the end of the trip. For six months t have notlred a cour, disconsolate not among cer tain friends. They eem takliv; life on the down-beat. One great edi torialist refers to "settled miasml that l forming like scum". The j rrif tot 'u'h fiiine la ch-iie. 1 t'lie i.irHy ('., a treter ,u , re-. turned Iroai a ui around the globs 1 Brady, MP. ANOINA PECTORIS ed oxygen gives the same beneficial effect as hundreds of gallons by In halation, tn pneumonias, heart dis ease, asthma, severe Infections." There Is no danger of embolism In injecting oxygen gas. Even If little of the gas entered directly into a vein or an artery It would be quickly absorbed Into the blood, un like the nitrogen of air. On the other hand there would be no great ad vantage In injecting the oxygen into thet blood directly, for It Is so quick ly absorbed Into the blood when It Is Injected under the skin. QUESTIONS AND AN 9 WEBS. Lift for Spinal Curvature One of your correspondents de scribed great benefit from' an extra lift on the shoes, for curvature of spine. I tried It. Four lifts bring spine into alignment and holds me up on the weak side very well. For some months the readjustment of my muscles was rather painful when on my feet for several hours. But rest. and use of heating pad, relieved that. I am 76 and have had curvature since I was 19. . . . (C. DeW.) Answer. Thank you. In some cases cork or leather lifts on sole and heel of one shoe correct the postural fault. The supervision of the physi cian is necessary when such correc tion is attempted. Milk In the Country Taking my baby to the country for a month. At home she has had only pasteurized milk. May I give her straight milk from the cow? , . . (Mrs. P. P.) Answer. Provided the cow la tu berculin tested, yes. , Otherwise, It would be well to bring the milk to a boll for a minute, to make It safe for the baby. Or pasteurize It your selfheat It In double boiler to 145 degrees F for 35 minutes, then let cool again. That la all there Is to pasteurising. Arthritis I'd like to get copies of your re cent Instructive talks about arthritis. . (W. A. J.) Answer. Send 10-cent coin and stamped envelope bearing your ad dress, for copy of booklet. "The Ills Called Rheumatism." (Copyright. 1930, John F. Dllle Co.) fcd Note: Pei Mini- wishing to communicate with Dr. Brad should tend letter dlmt to Dr William Brady. M U 265 fJ Camlno. tieverly tllilv Calif. w. thout feeling he la au courant with cptlmlsm stay-at-homes lack. Our Burton Hounses, examining life In a variety of places, build up a pr llo-h-phy that steels them against that i.uxlous tincture we call Life's iony. Ono of my happiest dinners was at the Explorer's club. Among men who had seen the world and lived among nil sorts. There wasn't an Old Man Orump among them. They laughed, they Joked and saw humor In every thingIncluding the future. Bob Flpley waa a gloomy chap unti: he tegan popping around odd corners. Now he'a the life of the party, the lay of sunshine In tbe grills. I asked the owner of a flashy night club If he had choice how he v.-ould like to "dress" his ringside for an opening night of a new night club. He Immediately named tiese: Talullah Bah knead. Clifton Webb and hla mother, Mrs. Harrison Wtl l:ams. Oene Tunney, Jules Olaenaer. Mary Saportas Tiffany, Floyd Olb- bona. Robert Taylor If In town nnd Gloria VanderbUt and her twin sister. With these, he said, and gioup of society chit-chat writers to annotate the doings next day, a place would be made at least for a few months. If the fosslly habited elegant across a!le from me the other night had 1 is way the doctors would be probing for bullets. That chunky comedian. Billy House. In abbreviated pants of Tyrolean vintage, made some crack f bout a boy scout on an outing at Btnr Mountain. Not particularly fun ny In the modern manner, but my sudden outburst was a lulu. His Jib- leta turned on a scowl. I trld to straighten out, squirming and flick ing Imaginary fluff from my coat sleeve. But the gorge rose again, so I grabbed my hat and shot up the aisle, but not without & good-bye guff 11 w that set the whole house roaring. (Copyright 1036. McNaught Syndicate) Meanie Grappler Wins Free For All PORTLAND. Ore.. Dec. 1, (API- Jack Llbscomb. "bad man" grappler from Indiana, emerged as top man In s battle royal at the labor temple last night. Lipscomb had It out with Jack Clayborn. negro, tn the finale, win ning in seven minutes with a crab hold. Castle, Don Sugat, Bulldog Jsck.n and Walter Achlu were the others In the six-sided encounter. Atlantic Swimmer Runs Out of Water NEW YORK. Dec. 1. (AP As pre dicted. Charles Zlmmy's attempt to swim the Atlantic in the heated pool of the liner Queen Mary failed In deference to cleanltness. When the E'..;nt ship berthed here officers reported that Zlmmy's mara thon ended the first ntght out, when the pool was drained. ( The Icy less, Long Beach, Calif, swimmer stayed In the chill English channel 10 hours 40 minutes tn 1932 but failed In his try to swim between England and the continent. The fortre.ts o Gibraltar was ceded to Great Britati; by the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. Comment of the Day s News By FRANK J FN KINS. g-iOLLOWIN'G along Klamath Lake, headed for Portland. Out In the lake the ducks are resting on the water In great shoals. They're smart. They know the hunters can't reach them out there. You'd be smart, too, If you knew your life depended on It. 4- F you want to get an idea how dry 1 the weather Is this fall, take look at the clump of great peaks along the skyline west of Bend, Normally, these two - mile - high mountains are glittering white. Now they are as brown as heaps of ashes Only a speck of snow here and there. This time last year. The Dalles- California highway was deep In snow Now snow la as scarce as It should be In August. f 1AY CREEK valley certainly Uvea I X up to Its name this fall. Hay stacks everywhere. And fat-backed steera eating the hay. It's a pros perous-looking sight. CULVER, Metollus and Madras peaceful enough utue towns now, Back In the days when they were carving Jefferson county out of big Crook, these towns were fighting vig orously for the honor of being the county seat. The fight got so hot that at one time they were hitching onto the county building with tractors In the night, and moving them from place to place. If the stark truth were told, they'd probably all be glad now to be back in Crook county, without the addi tional burden of taxes created by the new county units, 4 . IJOR that matter, ALL thla country 1 east of the mountains In Oregon waa once Wasco county, with the sea at The Dalles. With modern trans portation what It Is, It might be just as well If that situation still existed. But Just try to atsrt something along that line If you want a fight on your bands! ' 4 A UP IK named after the man who liquidated Big Chief Pau lina with an old Sharps rifle. Pau lina rated among the whites in the early days as a bad Injun, and hla liquidation was regarded as a public enterprise of highly praiseworthy character. The chancea are you'd be a bad Injun too If somebody was trying to take your country away from you. It all depends on the point of view. MORE evidence of the dry fall , Mount Hood la as bare on the: south side as a sandhill In midsum mer. On down the Sandy valley, at the edge of Portland, the dust la blowing before a strong east wind like the middle of the high desert. Qrass dry and brown and not even a trace of mist In the air. And here It Is nearly the first of December. Old Jupe Is certainly A.W.O.L. this fall. 4 Communications Dlrattomhlp vs. Church Attendance. To the Editor: I note with regret that you make no attempt to grant the request In my former communication to give your readers some ground for hope that we are NOT headed for a dicta torship In our nation. Your reader. J. B. Griffin, having no answer, at tempts ridicule and calls me Rev. Blllle. Well and good. WIU you klndy allow me to give you some further reasons for my fears, snd then perhaps you will attempt to allay those fears. Yesterday I read our president's Thanksgiving proclamation. Why It waa published so late you may know. But Instead of appearing In large type on the front psge, as tt should h&vt been. It occupied a very In conspicuous place, small type ON THE LAST PAOE. Then I also noted that he did not call the nation "to assemble in our usual places of wor ship" to give thanks for our atrlkca and calamities, but "each In his own way." which seems to be by playing football and eating the turkey for which our farmers can find no mar ket. I noted also In the news Item In the same paper that the five largest churches In Medford were to assem ble In the smallest auditorium of the five to express their thanks. This fits In with a recent experience -if my own: I drove to Medford on a Sabbath evening and went to the Presbyterian church to attend wor ship, anfi found the auditorium un lighted. I went over to another church on Main street, and found the youth in charge. The next Sab bath I went to the biggest church building in the city and found tho minister In his pulpit, and I heard him give an excellent sermon on the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and he had an audience of 29 people, by counting myself. During this past week I read a book lately off the press. In which the writer, a physician of Kansas City teTla of giving an address to a company of MINISTERS, and when he asked them what was contained in the Ark of the Covenant tn the temple of Solomon, one man harard ed the guest, the candlestick. No one corrected him. Fifty years ago i Sunday school child of ten year? i that cou.d not '.:ave answered the question would hT been laughed : at for his Ignorance. i Now, Mr. Editor. SINCE THERE IS A GOD OF RIOHTEOUSNESS WHO CONSIDEPS THE ACTION of men what ground have we for believing that our election does not mean that He has forsaken us to reap the fruits of our doings. REV. BILLIE CABLE. Lake Creek, November 28. 4 (Continued from Page One.) pass nothing except a routine bill re newing all but two or three of the nuisance taxes which expire in June. They do not even Intend to modify the corporation tax law in any Im portant particular, although they are talking aa if they would. However, the treasury is secretly at work on several general administrative tax re visions, one of which would increase the capital gains tax to discourage in vestors from holding on to stock galne. The treasury will assert It needs the revenue, but other adminis tration authorities fear Its effect on the stock market. Another draft of a capital gains amendment has been prepared confidentially by the con gressional tax drafter, Mr. Parker. The president will probably end the dispute by deciding not to shift any tax gears at all on the uphill climb tn prospect for 1937. A lobby campaign for crop insur ance Is already being organized. Great plains farmers are now assembling here, bent on showing that at leaat some farmers want It. The meeting is being promoted almost entirely by M. W. Thatcher, Washington repre sentative of the farmers' national grain corporation, a very large wheat farm co-op, subsidized by the farm credit administration. This organi zation may have more than an objec tive interest in insurance, as it swu to be the logical one to handle for AAmmUtlnn tha &0 nr 100 million bushels of wheat the sovemroent wiU have to keep as insurance reservea. A Incnrnnna nwltrrflrtl fitr WhfiAt will unquestionably be recommended to congress py me prewaeiiv, im probably wilt be passed along near the end of tho session. Th mrvirajs WfiiiftpA farm tenant program will be passed. A general re organization of the soli conservation set-up will be recommcnaea nu nmhahtv MMUrl In ft form Which Will permit tho AAA to continue benefit payments and effect production con trol, although thla haa not yet been definitely decided. The legislation which wilt emerge finally from the current wage and hours debate cannot yet be discerned. Everything will depend on two su preme court decisions, expected to be handed down before the session, is over. (1) the Wsgner labor board cases, and (2) the holding companies test suit. The Black 30-hour week bill will not be passed. Neither will the re vised O'Mahoney bill proposing a sys tem of federal charters for all cor porations. No constitutional amend ment will be presented by the presi dent, and none will be seriously con sidered, unless unexpected develop ment change the existing situation entirely. The senatorial Investigation of civil liberties will be renewed for the pur pose (among others) of helping John Lewis to organize the steel industry. A few administrative changes wUl be mads In soelnl security, but the tax will not be altered. Much ado will be made over gov ernmental reorganization, but It will not amount to much In dollar sav ings. The budget will show approxi mately & paper balance, but U. will not Include a definite relief figure Mr. Roosevelt will delay his relief estimate, as customary, until late In the session. Funds will probably be appropriated to continue the A. T. and T. Investi gation, which will shortly reopen with a bang. The Wheeler railroad financing in vestigation will reopen, without a bang. The threatened Investigation of Father Coughlln will be called off. Several housing bills are to be con sidered, but Mr. Roosevelt is not yet behind any of them, which means none now seems likely to pa$a. The pure food and drug bill will undoubtedly be smothered without serious consideration. This la an extremely young con gress, and the top-heavy Democratic majorities are destined to spilt into fscttons. but will be too much under the Roosevelt spell to be unruly. The leaders will promise a short session, as usual, but they will run on until June, or later. Burned to Death HEPPNER. Ore, Dec. 1. (API- Johnny Bonne, sheepherder of the Boe reman district, was burned to death when his clothes caueht fire before a stove. He had sought shel ter at his cabin from the cold. Passersby found htm beside the road. He died soon after they rushed him to a Pendleton hospital. Indian agency records show that Salvador Chappo, Pomo Indian on the Middletown Rancheria, Ca.1., Is 105 years old. MANNS HE.UTY MI.ON Thursday Speet.it t'lneer Vae and Shampoo for ?.V. MOUtKN WOMEh Ntd Not Safftf monthly pain ami dUr due to rtixt. nervous it rxin. rip. wurr iv icu : xt ruat. FTTH 1 1 Py'i'f a VI m a mr-M at I ft IHl VIA MONO y SHAKO" Flight To Time Medford and Jackson County history from the flies of the Mull Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY December 1, 1926 (It was Wednesday) Rainfall last night amounted to nearly an inch, and low places in ths city were Inundated. The storm sew ers were unable to take care of the surplus water, and West Main street is under water from gutter to gutter. Rogue river la near flool stage, and several county bridges over creeks have been washed" away. The precipi tation Is forecasted to continue. The Medford high school football team departs for Portland for game on Saturday with Grant high. State-j wide interest is shown In the oon? test which will decide the state title. Principal of Eugene high school Is "whitewashed" by studenta. Mayor Gates leaves for Crescent City to boost for coast railroad and harbor. Merchants announce they will hold their Christmas opening next Mon day evening, "rain, anow, wind, or moonlight." ' TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY i December 1, 1010 (It was Friday) King of Greece yields to allies' de mand for guns; Russia tries to eava Rumania from German advance; British cabinet facea crisis over war situation. "People's Progressive Non-Partisan Party" will hold a mass meeting, at Nat, December 13, to discuss the Me dynski plan. German troops within 12 miles of Bucharest, capital of Rumania. Medford students win military hon ors at Oregon Agricultural college. The Pan-Hellenic society will meet tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Robert Hammond. Anderson Creek ANDERSON CREEK, Dec. 1. (Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. Ralplj areen have moved to Talent and Mr. Oreen la working at Leland for Ch&s. Skeeters this winter. Everyone on the creek Joins In wishing Mr. and Mrs. Lelghton Mc Dowell much happiness In their mar ried lire. Mr. and Mra. Prank Doty spent Thanksgiving at Gold Hill aa guest of Mr. Doty's sister. Mrs. WUber Martin, and family. Mrs. Mlllspaw of Portland spent Sunday at the Mays home. Marlon Centers spent Tuesday night with hla sister, Mrs. E. Mays. P. M. Centers and Mrs. Bell Centers were In Medford Saturday. Mrs. Maya and daughter. ' Mrs. Prank Doty, spent Saturday In Med ford. Mrs. Jas. McDowell was In Talent Saturday on business. Guests at the McDowell home on Thanksgiving were Mrs. E. Maya, M. E. Fox and George Clark. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Brown enter tained a number of friends Thsnks glving. Mr. Donlcaa niece spent Sunday night with Mr. and Mrs. Donlca. BRIDGES WILL SPEAK AT PORTLAND MEETING PORTLAND, Dec. 1. Harry Bridges, president of t.h- Coast Longshoremen's union. Is sched uled to addrees a mass meeting at the le.bor temple here Wednesday night. Other labor speakers will Include. Harry Lundbera. secretary nt tfc- Sailors' Union of the Pacific, and H. Rogers, longshoreman represematlTa of Hawaii. CHRYSLER TOPS 'EM ALL. Hands Crippled by Awful Pains Williams R. U. X. Compound Relieves Agonizing Rheu matic Pains So He Can Return to Work SUFFERERS from acute, a t a b b I n g Rheumatic or Neurltlc Pains win be Intensely Interested in the sworn statement of a prominent landscnpe c.ud- ener of A too. Nevada, who waa actually oertrlri- den with R'.eu- I nahle to Get matte pain, but out of lied 1 ntll who now praises R. r, x. MltA the quick rllef mra from suffe r n g ho enjoyed Bller taking WILLIAMS R.U.X. COMPOUND. He writes: "For several years 1 hsvc been troubled with Rheumatic Pains In my arms and hands sometimes jo bad that 1 waa forced to give up my w-trk. Not long aso I was so bad I couldn't get out of bed ! "I tried every treatment svallnnle with no result. Then I read to much about WILLIAMS R.U.X. COMPOUND that I decided to try a bottl In no time at all IT WOKKED and 1 realized that I had at last found the medicine for my trouble. It was amazJng how quickly the muscular pains left my arms and hands. I was able to sleeD nicM vith.. ... have mralned my appetite and hava u--n um- io return to work " MR DAVID MONROE, 2201 south Vir ginia. Reno. Nevsdn. Local Druggist Offers Flee Trial Treatment To convince any doubters or skep tics, the Heath's nrno et.. ----- .w.r. unri. w let any sufferers take s 10-day trial tr..tm.m A. Wit T 1 . . . n ...... . ...... u, niLiiinsw n.u x COM POUND With tne distinct ,,nrf.r.-. Ing that unless their Rheumatic Pams are satisfactorily relieved, the 'reatment won't cost one cent: You -r Invited to come :n ; on-e and vet your tn.l bottle on tiila Monev. Back Guarantee. M,