PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MATT, TRTBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1936.
MEDFORD$iTRIBUNE
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Offleee In New York. Chicago, Detroit,
Saa Francleco, Loe Angelea, Sattle,
Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Tha Brltlah Prima Mlnlatar threat
en to resign, and tha cabinet to quit
unless Klnj Edward glvea up hi, plan
to marry Mr,. Simpson, the Ameri
can woman. Nothing like Mil, can
happen In thl, country, though if the
the Idea apreada the Oregon leglsla
ture may balk at convening, because
tha Wlllamott valley delegation don't
Ilk the Idea of a nooaevelt boy mar-
. . ni.Dni.1 irl nest. June. It
rjruiH
may all lead to governmental control
of Daniel Cupid.
Herewith exprcea thank, to the
Lawl, Super Service Station, and
Ooodrtdh Truck Tire, for a 1B31 cal
ndar. It la the flrat calendar ahow
amd upon ua, In all year,, though
before tha Depression they were
iH rt,Mlhitrmw lota. In
til
alna. It la an artlstlo offering, and
a credit to the wide-awake flrma. If
wo aver buy a logging truck. It wilt
roll on Ooodrlch tire,, and, If It aver
needa filing Mr. Lewie will fix It.
The calendar reveal, there I, but one
niday the 13th In tha coming year,
and it befall. In Auguat.
e
A bill Introduced In the nrltlah
Kmlee of Common, authorising "paln
laae death" waa defeated. It would
probably have been eomethlng like
wi ao-called "palnleaa dentistry."
e
"It will be a real treat to meet thl,
young gentleman and aoma one will
ha fortunate enough to have him In
for dinner." (Treka (Calif.) Journal)
A aoclal Hon la all dreaaed up, and
no place to eat.
The Duhb WaUon boy whlraed iat
tha 11th mile poet In the race with
Fr. Time Mem. He feel, a, young a,
ha aver'dld.
Salem dies, playera have adopKd
a rule requiring a plater to make a
move In 0 aeeond,. Thl, will knock
tha catlike patience out of a chess
plaver, and rush him Into doing the
vary thing he figured out he am
going to do 94 hour, before.
A former romantic actor and idol of
tha allent screen days, la now run
ning a hamburger stand In Holly
wood, lie Is Francis X. Bushman. A
number of the Older airls who were
thrilled by his film hand-holding
when they were In high school, feel
ha should still be acting, and hie
present day Imitators be running
hamburger stsnds.
e
CIVIC PI1IIR ITKM
(Sl.klyniu News)
"Treka has received consider
able unfavorable publicity during
the psst few years, with the re
sult that the general opinion of
people who have heard of us. but
never visited us, la that we are a
bunch of wild, wooly. flea-bitten
hlllJbllllea. who aettle all our
dlfflcultlee via the ,1,-shooter
or rope route."
Tha Oregonlan editorially present,
aa a winter', evening riddle, the re
election of Rep. Tlnkhsm, of Boston.
Ma., who made no csmpslgn, but
received more votes thsn the Presi
dent In his district, nirthermove.
Rep. Tlnkhsm is both a Republican
and bewhlskered. and his liailllwlrk
knee-deep In Democrat. There Is no
accounting for the remits, except
that the people were voting for Rep
Tlnkhsms' whiskers.
e
There wsa a ring around the moon
laat night, with two star, within the
circle. This Is a sign It will rain In
two day. Another token I the news
that crows the 7.600.000 blark ones
hsvc started cawing. R.rth are
phony There wilt be no rain until
c Wig Aihpole's porn start aching.
A Pltthurg. Pa., gas station at
tendant laughed and walked away
from an armed bandit, nd thua foiled
a robbery. His technique wsa success
ful for the nonce, and "left the ban
dit ahaahrct." He may leave the next
bandit eg and the key to his car.
The auto ,truck the boy bicyclist
Then a great many boys, riding two
on a bicycle, rode to the scene of the
accident, to be Imprwfrt with the
danger of pedalling In auto traffic,
during rush houra.
e
Experiment will be conducted to
determine If aoy beans can be grown
In this state. They probably will Hi
planted, and Iheir hoeing doea nra
conflict with the best fls'ilng. nd j
their harvesting with opening of the j
dear a aeon. I
We Hope He Is Right
DOTH sides in the maritime strike, repeatedly declare they
" want a peaceful settlement,
the inability to reach one.
Over ten dayg ago the San Francisco News offered a plan
whereby a settlement, in the opinion of thatf paper, could be
reached.
This plan was, briefly, to have a committee of adjudication
formed in each important port. There would be three members.
One appointed by the ship owners, one by labor, the third by
the U. S. department of labor, to represent the public, in no
way connected directly or indirectly with either side. This
committee would be given authority to decide such differences
as hiring hall regulations, which now form the chief stumbling
block to a settlement.
IT seemed then, and still seems, a reasonable proposal. It has
been endorsed by Edward F. 0Grady, assistant secretary of
labor, and according to the News met with hearty approval from
the people of San Francisco.
Yet, as far as we can find out, there has been no effort-on
the part of the ship owners or
such a proposal, much less endorse it.
Why!
If both sides in the controversy are sincere in their expressed
desire to end this strike, and reach a satisfactory working agree
ment, why should a definite proposal of this kind be entirely
ignored f
THE answer is they AREN'T. They both want a settlement,
hut. onlv nn thpir own terms. Thev want ncace but onlv
peace with victory, for their side.
The shipowners want to humble and if possible break the
maritime unions. The unions, not only are determined to pre
vent this, but have set out to
knees.
In other words, underneath
peace, which on both sides is merely window dressing, a state
of war in San Francisco exists. There is no spirit of give and
take, of conciliation and cooperation on cither side.
That ia why the situation ii
opinion of the present writer at
get worse before they get better.
THIS is all wrong, of course.
up which will outlaw strikes which disrupt interstate com
merce, and render arbitration of differences between labor and
capital mandatory, where the public welfare is involved, we can
see no hope of material or permanent improvement, in the rela
tions between labor and capital in this country.
Secretary McGrady in Portland, predicts that legislation will
be passed at the next session of congress, along the lines of the
railroad act which has kept peace in the land transportation
field for many years, and this maritime strike will be the nst
of its kind.
This ia the best news we hare heard since the present stiike
was called, If Mr. McGrady knows what he is talking about
and he probably does, then the present maritime mess, will
be well worth the sacrifices involved, and aa the cause of dt fin
ite federal action, will go down in history as a blessing in
disguise.
Three Democracies
WINSTON CHTJRCHIMi, brilliant British statesman, in a
recent speech spoke of Britain, France and the United
States as having common interests in "the preservation of
democracy and individual freedom." After paying his respects
to France, he continued :
"Acroaa tha Atlsntte ocean la another great democracy, a
child of our blood and Ideala the United States, which ha
Inherited and expressed In It own wsy British parliamentary
freedom and French revolctlonary equality.
"We must not aak too much of the Dnlted State,. W must
try to do the work ourselves. But wa may find tha United Statea
with ua at the end of the road."
' It is true that these three nations are the foremost exponents
of political and economic freedom in a world now growing more
and mora "authoritative" and tyrannical. We three still have
government by voters, through laws made by their chosen ser
vants, ins.tc.id of government by self-appointed bosses.
To Americans, no formal alliance with either Britain or
France ia conceivable; we do not make alliances. But it is
natural, and perhaps necessary in this time of confusion and
peril, for free nations to give each other moral support and
work together informally in economic matters, as the three are
now doing to some extent.
We cannot see far ahead and cannot give pledges of future
policy. Yet whatever cynics may say, common blood, common
culture and common institutions are strong bonds. R. S
Nature Comes to Town
ONK thing that civilization docs for people is to make them
mor appreciative of nature, including wild life. Aa people
Krovr in knowledge and in the refinements of life, less and less
ia it their idea of a good time to "go out. and kill something."
Legitimate hunting continues, but it is hedged about with more
restrictions. There is less cruelty and indiscriminate slaughter
and more appreciation of living animals. More and more, hunt
ing is done with no deadlier wetpons than cameras and field
glasses.
The most remarkable evidence of this change is seen in and
near cities, where birds, squirrels, rabbits and other wild crea
tures are now seen in greater numbers than they have been
since pioneer days. The most remarkabH thing about them is
their fearlessness. Only a generation ago they would have tied
at the sight of a human being, and with good reason. Now hoys.
their natural enemies, refrain from pestering them, and even j
dogs tolerate them, or are kept from them.
Aa a result, thousands of city families are able to enjov the :
songa and nntiea of these lovely wild creatures in public purk.s
ami in their own yards. And it hss come about not so much ;
from strict laws as from the natural growth and understanding !
of the people themselves. K. $ 1
The oldest spring pavilion In the
United 5tate wns erected over one
of the famous spring t White Rul -
phur Sprlnffs, W. Va, about 191.
and blame the other side for
maritime labor, even to consider
bring the ship owners to their
all this talk about the desire for
so hopeless, and why in the
least, conditions are bound to
.
But until some machinery is set
Anaxlmander, a Greek of the tilth
: .-entury, B. C", la credited with hav
jin disiajncd the first map of the
j world.
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-ad'
drefsed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters
No reply can be made to queries not
Dr. William Brady, 265 El tarn I no, Ileverly Hills, Calif.
NUTRITIONAL DKFICI
In a previous talk we pointed out
that both underweight young adults
and overweight adults of mature age
(over 35 year)
are more suscep
tible to pneu
monia and less
capable of recov
ering from the
Illness than are
normal persons.
Under weight
and overweight,
however, are by
no means the
only Indications
of faulty nutri
tion or nutri
tional deficiency.
Perhaps the treat majority of indi
viduals who suffer from nutritional
disorders, whether In mild, latent
functional degree or as a clearly de-
fined nutritional disease presenting
dharacteriMlc organic changes, are
neither underweight nor overweight.
Prom experimental observation or
study, animal feeding experiments,
investigators have Inferred that short
age of vitamin A In the dally food
may be accountable for Increased
.susceptibility to or rather fat Mire to
develop sufficient Immunity from the
cri. In case you haven't heard, the
crt (kree) means any respiratory In
fection before Its specific nature can
be diagnosed, that Is, In the stage
when Ignorant and vicious folk Indis
criminately peddle the Infection
among all who come within conver
sational spray range, the while they
try to excuse themselves for the crime
by protending It la "Just a slight
cold."
Although I have been eagerly seek
ing prnctlcal evidence that vitamin
A In adequate amount helps to main
tain good Immunity against respira
tory Infection. I am bound to admit
I have not yet found any convincing
evidence, and I am beginning to
doubt whether deficiency of vitamin
A occurs at all in this country, al
though I know deficiency or vitamins
B, O, C and D are quite common
even If not reeognlr-ed or diagnosed
or suspected by the physician. Bo
many common foods In the form or
condttion usually Ingested contain
vitamin A that It seems unlikely that
any one shjwld get Insufficient vita
min A, unless his diet Is extraordi
narily restricted. A six months old
Infant gets a thousand units of vtta
mln A In s quart of milk. Yolk of
egg, banana, spinach, butter or cream,
etc., supply additional vitamin A. To
mato Juice, fresh or factory (vacuum
process) canned, supplies about the
same amount of vitamin C ns orange
QQMclnfyre
NEW YORK, Dec. 3. The most
easily found occupational niche In
the metropolis Is "pearl diving" or ;
dish-washing. There is always a lack
of dlah washers,
as the "Help
Wanted" col
umns reveal. And
no ona remains
a dishwasher any
length of time.
It Is, aa a rule,
the last Job a
man will take
and the first he
will desert when
something better
comes along, it
la estimated
there are 15.000 new dishwashers go
ing to work every morning In the
greater metropolis. And few remain
more than two weeks.
The task requires no apprentice
ship, and thousands turn to It when
other avenues appear closed. Many
now fnmoua New Yorkers served time
In some obscure and dingy restau
rant to stave off atarvatlon. Th
pay la often meals, a place to sleep
and 15 a week.
Another advantage In "pearl div
ing." fo- those who through no fault
of their own reach the low rung, is !
the obscurity. No one ever sees a
dishwasher. Incidentally, two faat
selllng novels and a book of poems
have be?n written by those bridging
lean Interludes In this low ' task.
Aviation sign work Is 'in of the
growing new Industries signs thst
will catch the eyea of not only avi
ators and mechanics but passengers
while aloft. A building with a large
roof, especially If flat, along one of
the well-traveled air lanes Is worth s
tidy sum In rentals. There Is a firm
in Radio City that has scouts to
find good space, arrange contracts,
devise and Install the signs.
Breause my life save the last half
dvrn years has been lived In hotels,
the bell-hop hss interested me. No
calling so sharpens the wits. Some
times for good, but not always. I
have seen green plow.plueked boys
arrive on the hotel bench fcongls
eved with curiosity and awkwardness
and In several months become
smoothies who know all th answers.
There are boys who use bell -hopping
ss a step up, and others who re
main boll -hops alt their lives. Many
have an amaring Rift for Jurenes
rence. Some m 4S and SO look no
HELP BLADDER
M Kt' THIS ? V TtT
Prink six gl.es boiled or distilled
wsier datlv, You know what hard
water does to a iewkcttle. H poor
bladder art Ion causes set tin up
nichts. frequent desire, scanty flow,
burninc or backache, help flush out
excess nrida and lnunirltts by Im
proving the elimination. Use bUfhu
leaves, juniper oil snd fl other drugs
made into sret'i. tablets. Just sy
BMkfti to nnv drucsM In (mir days
if ii. u pli-A-M : bm-k and gft your
J.V. Heath IVHS Store snd JstmlD
Lru store, McUlcrd, Oregon.
HI
Brady, M.D.
received only a few can be answered
conforming to Instructions. Address
BSCY AND PNEUMONIA.
Juice and about six or seven times
as much A as doea orange Juice.
I believe shortage of vitamin D,
which la almost universal in Infancy
and probably more frequent in child
hood and adolescence than has been
recpgnized In the past, may be the
vitamin factor which Is concerned In
Immunity to the crt. A teaspoon ful
of fish liver oil contains 300 units of
vitamin D and 2000 units of vitamin
A. Perhaps this fact accounts for in
accurate Inferences from the use of
fish liver oils for the prevention of
and eatment of respiratory Infec
tions. In practice there la more con
vincing evidence of the value of vita
min D for this purpose. I should
advise vitamin D Instead of vitamin
A for any one who la unduly auscep
tlble to respiratory Infection.
QUESTION'S ASP ANSWERS.
Child Sweirtn.
My boy, agM three, sweats a great
deal when asleep even though not
covered mufh. Have been told this
Is due to rickets . . . Mrs. O. O.
Answer Common causes of such
sweating In Infants or young chil
dren are: () Insufficient ventllatton
and excessive clothing or covers, due
to Ignorance of parents and physic
ians who Imagine "colds" are due to
air; (3) tuberculosis; (3) latent or
manifest rickets, Olve the child his
place In the sun and his quota of
cool, fresh air. It would at least do
no harm to give him for a few months
an optimal ration of vitamin D. If
fish liver oils or their concentrates or
derivatives are repugnant to the child.
he will take condol all right this la
tastolrss, and a single drop In milk,
tomato Juice, or on cereal. Is equiva
lent to a whole teaspoonful of the
best cod liver oil In vitamin D.
Malaria.
Please send me the cause, symp
toms and cure of malaria fever , . .
Mrs. W. A. h.
Answer T believe you can get a
free pamphlet on malaria by writing
tthe Public Health Service. Wash
ington, D. C.
Berf-Wettlng.
Our four year old boy had measles
a year ago and has been wetting the
bed a good deal alnce , . . S. C. B.
Answer Send three-cent atamped
envelope bearing your address, and
aak for monograph on "Management
of Bed-Wetting."
(Copyright, 1030, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Peisnnf wtshlnt to
communicate with Dr. Bradj
hould send letter direct to Pr
wnilam Brady. M P. 6S ei
ramlno Heverlv Hlil. Calif
more than 35. Often men of family,
settlPd habits and home owners. A
crack bell-boy in a swank Inn during
flush days often knocked out from
50 to S60 a week. Even today many
are able to make $40.
Thcro are a number of professional
bell-boys, Invariably known by the
nickname "Red." They are roamers
of a somewhat fly-by-nlght guild.
One month In San Francisco, the next
In Boston. They are alert, capable
and never have trouble getting Jobs.
They are the boys found at the flossy
Florida resorts. Those Florida Jobs,
Incidentally, are most prized of all.
Park, aa far as Implying swank
goes, holds the same sway In popular
thought as Fifth avenue did up until
about five years ago. But the reign
will probably not be so long. Fifth
wns able for 15 years to resist the
emulous cheap-John Invaders. But
In three years' time that part of
Park that lies In the 40's has gone
almost, wholly commercial not
i
PJUJCDMSrg
World'i ftrtf eon with dual economy of From oil
cleaner and jutomatic overdrive New underslung
raor ax lei glvs big roomy Interior! choir Height
tear World) largeit luggage capacity World'i
eaiieit doting doort with exclusive non-rattle rotary
door leciii a World'i nmt con with built-in worm
air dtlroitert Only can with Automatic Hill Holder and world')
imeothtit hydraulic brai World'i itrongsit, lafeit and qutereit all iteel bodlei
rein I orcd by iteel Stvdeboket'i C. I. T. Budget Plon off an low tlm payments,
SANDERSON MOTOR CO.
STUDEBAKER SALES AND SERVICE
207 South Riverside . Phone !3$5
cheaply so, however. At tha moment
the ventures are strictly rut da la
Palx. There are no gaudy signs that
tall aplnned the avenue. But that
phase will come. No street seems
able to duck the despotlers not even
the famed Champs Elysees, now gone
five -and -ten and bankrupt salesy.
Thlngmuabobs: Amelia Earhart is
building a home In Hollywood. . .
Jack Dempsey's favorite dish at hi
restaurant Is sirloin steak with baked
potatoes. . . . Floyd Gibbons always
goes for a heavy midnight lunch. . . .
King Edward's American lady friend.
Mrs. Simpson, says she never expects
to reutrn to America again. . . . Ted
Lewis la to build a house near his
old home town. Clrclevllle, O., for
the carpet slipper days. . . . Sign in
West 18th street: "Lecture Tonight
on Confiscatory communism."
She came tripping up the avenue
a perky Ann Pennington of 20 years
ago, with a mink penwiper hat over
one eye,-a chinchilla muff the size
of a cream puff and a tight-fitting
coat that had tiny buttons flecked
with white ermine. A passing truck
driver, gazing at her, called to
buddy: "I could fur one up like
that even on my pay."
(Copyright, 1938, McNaught
Syndicate.)
Comment
of the
Day s News
By FRANK JENKINS
EAVING Portland, by way of the
L waplnitla cut-off. Still dry and
dusty, although this morning there
was fog In the air. But the weather
Is distinctly unusual for this season.
THE Waplnitla cut-off, on the
Portland side, follows closely the
route of the old Barlow road, by
which the ox-team pioneers reached
the Willamette valley from The
Dalles, where they were forced to
leave the Columbia.
It took them a month or so of hard,
back-breaking work to make this trip
which we now make in an hour or so.
Times have certainly changed.
4
IF WE could go back and live the
lives of the ox-team pioneers, and
endure the hardships and privations
they endured, even the worst pessimist
among us would be compelled to ad
mit that times have changed for the
BETTER.
4
(This writer la just foolish enough
to believe thst when OUR grand
children look back to this present
period they will pity us aa much
for the privations we now endure, in
comparison with what will be THEIR
standards, as we now pity the pio
neers of the early forties. The world
hasn't finished getting better).
NINETY-THREE years ago, almost
to the dsy, General John C.
Fremont (then a young capatln),
started south from The Dsllea, headed
for Klamath lake.
The weather, then as now, was
clear and crisp, but was evidently
much colder than today. Fremont
kept careful weather records, snd he
mentions that night the temperature
often dropped to around zero.
He and his party followed closely
the present route of The Dalles-Csll-fornia
highway, and they got aa far
south as the Klamath marsh. There
they turned eastward, intending to
cross the Rockies in midwinter snd
so return to St. Louis.
Snert,
I
MAI
i SZl. .
THE deep snow of the high
desert winter, however, proved
too much for them, and they turned
south, crossing the Sierras after al
most incredible efforts, and so reach
ed Sutter's fort, where gold waa to
be discovered some yesrs later.
They spent the rest of the winter
here, and returned to St. Louis by the
southern route. What he saw while
at Sutter's fort led to Fremont's re
turn three years later, with a military
party, to be on hand when the Call
fornlos seceded from Mexico and
set up a republic of their own.
The new Csllfornla republic Joined
the United States by snnexatlon, and
Fremont became the first governor of
the new state.
WHAT if Fremont hadn't been on
hand at the psychological mo
ment? What If the California re
public had gone on governing Itself
until such time as traditions and pa
triotism had been established, and so
never had been annexed to the United
States?
What if there were an actual fron
tier where now Is the California state
line, with customs officers and high
tariffs snd possibly even fortifica
tions, Instead of merely the bug sta
tions and the California state depart
ment of agriculture?
Well, In that event, things would
be a lot different In Southern Oregon.
THE point la that Fremont didn't
Just HAPPEN to be In California
at the psychological moment. He was
SENT.
That Is to ssy, back In the early
forties there were men In the gov
ernment of the United States with
brains enough to foresee the needs
of this now great country and act ac
cordingly. For that fact, we are truly grate
ful.
Flight 'o Time
Med ford and Jackson County
history from the flies of the
Mull Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AOO TODAY
December 8,
(It was Friday)
West Main street still flooded due
to con tin tied rains. Stock In the
Table Rock district Is moved to high
er grounds. Farmers delayed by ex
cessive moisture; 1.13 Inches of rain
falls In city last night.
Eagle Point high school building
neara completion.
Talent school children to sell
Christmas seals.
Sams Valley roads out of commis
sion as result of heavy rains.
Nine members of Eugene high
school student body expelled for
whitewashing the principal.
New plana for Yule opening next
week considered by merchants.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 3, 1016
(It was Sunday)
National budget for coming year.
presented to congress, calls for 1,
266,713,634. Lee Watson Joined the U. S. signal
corps today and will leave for Van
couver, Wash., next Tuesdsy.
O. Fuji, well known local chef, wins
the city billiard championship series
at Brown's.
The city ordinance requiring all
toom
motor vehicles to carry a red light In
the rear goes Into effect next Wednesday.
Police seize ten gallons of moon
shine in raid on rooming house.
Rainfall during November less than
half of average, weather bureau re
ports. Only 1.99 Inches of rain fell
Inst month.
Strike Profitable
For Canadian Ports
PORTLAND. Dec. 3. (VP) The
Pacific coast maritime tie-up. eco
nomically disastrous In the United
States, has been turned to profit at
British Columbia ports.
A bulletin Issued by Vancouver,
B. C. employers says the volume of
trade handled through that port and
the work given waterfront employes
has more than doubled normal aver
ages. new .ongsnore crews are maae up
ax fast as men can be found and
about 1300 are on the job each day.
corny of scam treatments
SPECIAL fl for 93.00
Mond-iy and Tuesday only.
.Mann's Beauty Salon.
The two simultaneous productions
of "Hamlet" on Broadway mark the
third time that this play has been
seen In double presentations in Tfew
York City.
iFcDJP
Schilling
Baking
Powder
THE PASTRY SHOP
419 East Main
(ON OHIlEn)
Pumpkin Chiffon Pie
with Cheese Crust 350
Strawberry Chiffon Pie 35$
Apple and all ordinary
pies 250
Angel and Devils Food
cakes 600
Triple Pecan and Apricot
cake (lovely) $1.00
Brown Sugar Cake
with raisins 300
CITY CLEANING
& DYEING CO.
624 No. Riverside
PHONE 474
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Insist On Delicious
Lost River
BUTTER
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