Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1937)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, fEDFORD, OREGOy. StTXPAT. MAY 16. 1937' MEDFORDwTSDUirE "Bveryoaa la oathrra Ormnm Bidi Cta HiU Trlbu'r Dally Ctrvpt Bfetr4ay Subllsh4 by MEDrORD PRINTING CO. M-1T-3I N. rir 8L PhOD II ROBERT W. RUHU Editor ERNSftT R. OIUiTRAP. HiniH Ad lDdpodBl Navspapsr Entrd ai mcod1-cIm mattar at ! lord, OragOB uodtr Act of II area 1. I1H BimSCRIPTION RATE! . 97 Mail In Adaoca: Daily, ona yaar Dally, ! ntontha Dally, ona month.............;" By Carrlar. In Adanea Madford, Aan- land. Jackaonvllla, Cantrai Poiot, phoanlt. Talent, Oolfl Bill aaa as hlahwaya. Dally, ona yoar Dally, an montha Dally, ona month AH tarma, caah In advance. Official Papr of Ibo City at MafaH Official Pa par of Jack Oooaty II EH HER OF THE ASSOCIATED PIMI KMtlna rnll LaaaaJ Wlra Barvlr Tha Aaaooiatad Praia la oiualaiy ao tltlad to tha uaa for publication of al iii.niflhB railltar1 to it or ether wlaa eradltad In thia pa par. and alao to tha local nawa publish haraln. AH rlfhta for publicatloo of apaeiaJ dlapatchaa noram ara aiao f MEMBER OF ITNITBD PRESS MEMBER OP ADDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advartlalas itapraaaatatlvaa Offlcsa 1. N. York. Obtests, Dstrott, .n FrinelKO. Ui Angeles, aealtle, reriliad. u Loan. Allaata. Vaneoaeer. tD Ye Smudge Pot Br Aribuf Perry. Orchardleta have started to nail th. end of th froet denier period, and soon will be fearlnf hll, nd tha Insect world. ... Bub Thelrolf and. J. Vawter will Invad. Holland thia summer, aa Boy 8couU. If they find a dike with a hole In it. they will plui earn.' with their thumb.. ... Quit, an argument broke out on the street Prl. on the right of free gab, and, who la running tn coun try. ... Ah Banwell and fellow Brltona eat up Wed. night to bear Oeo. VI take the relna In England. .... Counterfeit atrawberry ahortcake la now on tan. In thia eoncootton, the cook forgot to put In the atraw berrlea. and Juat thought of the aula In time. ... The Main Stem paving waa patoh ed last week, and now needa noth ing but widening, and new lamp poata. It la rumored that aome of the " Payments" for. 'tV autoa, have itarted to harden. ... Madame Butterfly , while flitting over the cthae lawn Thura. pm. waa bit Into, by Blmer ("Killer") Sparrow. ' . . . A light-hearted Republican from Chicago. 0. a. Dewea. predicted an other depreailon In 1S39. Many feel the will not get out of th. current panic In time, to get Into the new one. The predlcter waa onoe vice president, and puffed an under alung pipe. ... Spring aneaked In Prl. and It waa about time. A number of acreen doors have been hung. None fitted like they did when taken down last fall. Philander McEntyre, 101, towned Prl. and attended lodge. Hla five hens are laying fine. Philander waa feeling chipper, and enjoying the sunshine. ... Dick Runystf I. called at the Bates Boye chlnwhackery Sat. and was trimmed. ... The county la waging war on weeds, by th. use of chemicals. It la said to be very effective, but no mora ao than building a service ststlon over them. ... Bsckyard gardens ara progressing, and need hoeing, wives have been told by their matea. ... Some new face, will be on may hem card at the Armory tomorrow night, and their wearera are aspect ed to knock some of the uncouth ness out of th. foe. . . Local Young Democrats sre get ting ready to take a aland on tha Bonneville Dam power distribution Issue. After the decision, the Col umbia river, thi world, and the power trust Is npected to continue aa usual. ... Kay-fever, lumbago, and a num ber of minor ailment, ara mixed In with the current epidemic of aprlng fever. ... Eagle Point will be swigging Med ford meter after June 1, Their new water worka Is nearly completed. ... The country never lookvd greener, but the population Is not following suit aa well aa In prevloue yeara. ... Farmers will soon be In need of hay-hsnds to provide the proper leverage on the busineae end of the pitchfork. Jim Hermy O'Brien of Offenbeched tha last Applegat.. week. Pool Room Burglarlxed CORVALLIS. May 14. -(API Bur glara who entered a pool room here obtAined approximately 1100 In addi tion to an undetermined amount from plnball machlnea. the proprietor reported to police. It was tha second similar robbtry thle week. TJie Union and Henry Ford 'T'HE drive to unionize Henry Ford bag started. Homer Martin, head of tne automobile workeri, ex-minister and typical labor union agitator will direct the offensive. Martin declares he already has "thousands of workers in the River Rouge plant, and it won't take long to sign up all the Ford employees." .- The Ford management says nothing, but distributes among its employees cards entitled "Fordisms" closing with this perti nent observation: . "Workers ought to consider whether It la necessary to psy aome outsider, .very month for the privilege of working at Fords.". . There is the American labor drama in miniature, and it will be interesting to observe its development, and which party will be on top at the final curtain. i. TTHAT fjnai Fordism is pretty hard to answer. Why SHOULD a Ford employee, pay union dues, when he is satisfied with his wages, his working conditions, and the treatment he is re ceiving? What will he get for his money! What will the union give him, that he can't get without it T The answer is "nothing" as LONG AS COXDITIONS REMAIN AS THEY ARE, as long as the worker is satisfied with conditions as they exist. But how about the future! Henry Ford is not as young as he once was, he can't live forever, let it be assumed that he dies, and the benevolent autocracy he now represents is replaced by an autocracy that is not benevolent. What will the individual worker's position then bet His wages are cut, his working conditions become intolerable, but what can he do alone? HPHE answer to that is also "nothing." He will then wish he had joined the union, and had 90,000 fellow workers to act and speak with him. That will probably be one of the talking points advanced by the Reverend Martin, and one of the least effective. For Henry Ford's health is excellent and when he does retire, there is every reason to believe, his generous attitude toward his work ers, will be eintinued. OUT the main appeal will be to the worker's class conscious ness, the loyalty he owes as a laborer to the labor movement as a whole. "In union there is strength, in numbers there is power." "Come on boys, don't be dumb, jump on the band wagou. for this is Labor's Day." That accompanied by the proper table thumping, and a few of epithets, will be vigorously applied, by Brother Martin and his oratorical lieutenants. And it will work at least with-most. And perhaps as Dr. Martin maintains, eventually with all. , . C0R we Americans are great JOINERS. If the average homo sapieus, will pay monthly dues to wear a grotesque uniform that would make a Mexican general on dress parade look like Mahatma Gandhi, why should he object to similar dues when it gives him something that comes close to his day-byday job, involves his standing among bis fellow workers and is intimately connected with his future security? The best answer is that "he won't" At least that is our prediction, as far as Henry Ford is concerned. Why SHOULD he? Under the provisions of the Wagner Act which Henry Ford has officially recognized, the worker has nothing to LOSE by joining up with the union (except his dues) and everything to GAIN. And here we come to the crux of the entire matter, at once the strength and the weakness of the American li'.Lor movement. "PVERYTHING to gain I" Self interest, that is the mainspring of most human ac tions, Hnd it is certainly tho mainspring of the labor movement , No one denies the Ford workers are generally satisfied with the present situation. They are among the highest paid workers and artisans in the world. They have privileges in the direction of csre, health, education, security, etc., etc., unequalled in any industry in the country. But of course, conditions arc never perfect, they always could be better And here is where Brother Martin and his professional spellbinders will step in. "Join the union and they WILL be better." This will be the promise direct or strongly implied, and how many Ford emplovees will refuse to accept it! Not MA NT. So what? Just this: Once the Ford workers are generally unionized, it will be up to the union organizers to make good on that promise. They can't stand idly by and pull in their salaries, month after mouth and year after year. They will have to show results, or the boys won't pay their dues. And if conditions are generally satisfactory to the workers, how can they show results? Obviously by persuading the work ers they AREN'T satisfactory, that while they are good they could be better, and demanding that the management regard less of its capacity to do so, make them better. N short, here we come to the inevitable point where unionua- tion of labor becomes a racket and a bad racket. A breeder of unrest and discontent, of ceaseless agitation and propaganda ; demands following demands, one no sooner granted than another prepared, hell to pay in general and no fire depart ment in sight, because union growth and prosperity grows on selfish betterment through CONFLICT. It is tho OTHER side of the labor movement. the vicious circle side, and unless all signs fail, the final act in this drama of Ford unionization will clearly reveal it. IT is our prediction the moment Ford is thoroughly unionized trouble will start. . Who can blame Henry then for being unalterably Ol'l'OSED to it. On the other hand, putting oneself in the wage earner's place, who can blame. the workers for organising for self pro tection, possible benefits, independence and greater power? It's the old problem, "brethren and sistern" of what hap pens when an immovable body meets an irresistible force. The only hope in the final analysis, lies in a new siri' in the ranks of both capital and labor, a spirit of cooperation and peace, instead of a spirit of hate, suspicion and WAR. I the best known rabble-rousing Personal Health Service By William Signed letlera pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not ta disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Ur. Brady U stamped self addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and wrtlten In Ink Onlng to the large number of letters received only a re can ba ensnared No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, CSS El Camlno, Beverly, Calif. EAT, FAST AND Manifestations of cardiovascular degeneration In lta Incipient or earliest stage sre scarcely sufficient to alarm the vic tim. The aymp- toms (changes the aubject may perceive) and eigne (chances fif rwA the physician V4 "NaVef i I mav "nd by per- Iodic examlna- JLV -.M, M I tlona or health fV j' J audita) of begln I x ' ' I nln6 arterloscler- efw",l osls, hypertrophy 7 of hesrt and so amsasssssssttxeasssY on, are only grad ual and hence for a great many heedless young folk senility rather than life begins at forty. At thirty to forty, tha very prime of life for man or woman, one natu rally dislikes to recognize a alight falling off In physical or mental ef ficiency or both, a slight decrease In former ambition or "pep " one wanta to go on laughing at doctors and their incessant croaking about rules of hygiene and right living. One la Inclined to think that only morbid or credulous persona spend good money and time undergoing fool health examinations annually or at all. one would rather try thia or that no6trum If occasionally one has a little "stomach trouble" or "liver complaint" or "autointoxication." or take aome tonic or other when one feels run down from "overwork" or "nervous exhaustion" from business or domestic cares and responsibilities. Burns that suggest beginning car diovascular degeneration but are not diagnostic are (1) accumulation of excesa weight aftr the age of thlray three years; (3) tendency to grow short of breath after moderate ex ertlon which formerly did not tax the "wind": (3) Inability to hold the breath at least thirty seconds when at rest: (4) Inability to run half a mile without getting "winded": (51 pulse rate which remains rapid more than three minutes after twenty deep knee flexions. The appearance of minute dilated venules ("broken capillaries") In the skin of the cheeks, nose and else where what casual observers call florid complexion and, with the cor pulency that often accompanlea it. the "picture of health" Is more like ly of early arteriosclerosis, premature senility. Many men In the Incipient stage of csrdlovascular degeneration drift along from having successfully pass ed a life Insurance examination. Such an examination -does not disclose the Comment on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS llfORLD-SHATERINO news: Rumors arc spreading over London that George VI (who Is the new king o( England) will GROW A BEARD, now that he has been safely crowned and has some time on his hands. (The purpose of the beard, it la carefully explained. Is to mnke him look more like hla father, the late George V. It Isn't officially explain ed, but Is fully understood, that the REAL purpoae is to make him look LESS like his brother Edward.) JiyiORE world-shattering newa: ' King Oeorge VI and Queen Elir-abeth. smiling and rested, drove through London streets Thursday af ternoon In a surprise post-coronation tour. The populace, this dispatch adds, was AMAZED AND DELIOHTED. f f ARD-BTTTEN and more or less cynlcnl westerners, out here In the sticks, will figure that If a aim pis buggy-ride through the streets Is enough to amaze and delight these Iondoners It ought to be fairly easy to keep them in Just an ordinary good humor. llfHILE the simple folk of London " are all twittered up over the fact that their king and queen took ride through the streets, the big shots are rent with discord. It seema that Edward, who chucked away the crown that has Just been placed upon his brother's brow. Is stubborn about demanding that Wally be recognlred as "her royril highness, the Duchess of Windsor. "and the big shots are sure m their mind' that Just "Duchess of Windsor'' Is enotigh. The quarrel got so acute on Thurs day that they had to hold a cabinet LAWN MOWER HOSPITAL KK-ksinlthl. all kfndi Rrpslrllii and sharpening, etc Try out work; It's th. brsu PHONE 203 HE ILL CALL Dawson Filing & Grinding Works II NOH1H RUM Brady, M P. BE TOO OLD early stage signs of cardiovascular de I generation, nor la the life Insurance I examiner concerned about other ! health deflclenclea which may be the only manifestations of thia heart and artery failure In early adult life, not conclusive symptoms but suggestive, such aa Increasing disinclination to Indulge In active exercise or work or play Increasing aallowneaa, coarse ness, harshness and dryneas of tha akin, dull gray congested eyes, stom ach troublea and dull headacbea to which one waa not aubject when In ordinary health, hair turning prema turely gray, chronic tired feeling not relieved by much rest or by a va cation, ataleneas, mental torpor, poor circulation, cold handa and feet. Wrong eating habits may be con sidered a fundamental cause of car dlovascular degeneration, and I be Have It Is how fast you eat more tban how much you eat that determines how early you will grow old. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Chronic Running Ear I am alxteen. I am unable to hear In my left ear. I had an abscess In It when I waa small, and three years ago Infection from the water at the beach. There la a foul dtacharge much of the time. (V.O.C.) Answer It Is a serious condition and should have thoro treatment by your physician or an ear specialist. If you cannot have proper treatment, avoid putting otla or other medica menta in ear. avoid wearing cotton or other plug, apply twice dally a drop or two of agreeably warmed solution of 10 grains of boric acid In an ounce of pure grain alcohol. Warm It by stsndlng the vial in warm water. Continue using the drops for several months, but only If you are unable to have the condition treated by a physician. - Healthy Girls Should my twelve-year-old daugh ter play basketball and dance7 She wanta to take toe-dancing. Anything Injurious In these activities for a girl of her age? Mrs. T.C.L. Answr On the contrary, such ac tivities are rather beneficial for girls, that Is. when pursued In the privacy of the school or class. The only harm cornea where schoolgirls are permitted to engage in - exhibitions aa profes sional rather than amateur players. Every mother with a young daughter fcboutd send stamped envelope for ad vice about specie hygiene for girls. Copyright 1937, John F. Dllle Co, Ed. Nufe: rersuns wishing to communicate with Dr. Hrady ithniild send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. St D. 26S El Camlno. Beverly Hills. I allf meeting about It. ! There's still grief In old England, you see coronation or no coronation. NE more big newa Item worth paying cable tolls on: Little Princess Margaret's crown didn't fit. right in the midst of the ceremony, when solemnity waa so thick you could have cut It with a knife. It slipped down over one ear The dispatches tell us tnat she "shoved It back on top of her head Impatiently and went on trying to count the people In the abbey." That was probably the only whole souled, simple, NATURAL gesture In the entire coronation ceremonial. Children are children, even when they're also princesses. Slips That Fit by KICKERN1CK 91.95 Panne. Crepe, Satin 93.95. Ethelwyn B. Hoffmann. 8 & H Oreen Stamps. ,de .....we .... .... a. 4? A Pleasant Stop over on the Trip to San I'ranclscu Cross the Bridges Ourtn Oaliht! HOTEL WOODLAND WOODLAND. CALIF. Nftt, fireproof building, on p. Htfhwa; 99-tt 80 ROOMS 80 BATHS RATES FROM $2 00 COtKKb sailor KOOM SERVICE - TAVERN OFFICIAL AAA HOTEL WARM IN WINTER COOL IN SIMMER Pair H Chambers. Proprletoi y-O.O.Mdnfvre NEW YORK, May 15. Purely per sonal piffle: Suggestion for a re vue title: "Dlt Done!" meaning "Say you!" Top radio drool: Those Junior G-Men skits. My wife never misses naming a 'V"IJ-1 mawgj hit song the first jayrggg5jj tRne hear( x tV-.-'ArV 8taee show I en- Joyed most this year: "Excur sion ." Spook stuff: An annonymous c 1 a 1 r voyant In Colorado for five yeara hu bean sending me pre dictions about my personal life that have com true. Tou learn from a motor trip to Wilmington that 43 duPonts are listed In the phone book. Natives say: "All the duPont are hard workers." Stay home, write travel stuff and grow rich: Frank Sullivan has made some nice chunks writing about Im aginary visits to Hollywood, Paris, etc. And historians say one of tho better descriptions of Venezuela was written by Jamea Jeffrey Roche, who had never been there. For real Broadway color: Lindy'e at the dinner hour. Cub reporter thrill: Coming upon Alice Roosevelt Long worth smoking a cigarette In the garden of the Long worth home in Cincinnati. All the Eddies in New York have of a sudden become Eddys, for goodness sakes Only musician I ever heard to make a mandolin orchestra enter taining Dave Apollon. Some years ago at a gallery I saw a painting, "At the Perry." which I have long coveted, but dealers never heard of It. The Rltz Carlton once had a patron who ate a chilled grapefruit salad at 3 o'clock every morning. He claimed It kept his weight at normal, although he could eat what he pleased during the day. Grand advertising psychology: The air lines admitting that people are be coming afraid to fly and showing them how comportlavely safe it Is. Nothing was ever gained by evasion. save a lack of confidence. Movie disillusionment: The odds are 100. 000 to 1, against a movie extra be coming a great star. After hearing most of the recent talkie tunes, one has a new appreciation for the su premacy of Irving Berlin. Predic tion: Wynne Murray of "Babes In Arms" will b ethe next Kate Smith of the radio. Dead ringer for Sam Bernard in "The Rich Mr.' Hoggenheimer '; Sam Rosoff all duded up In riding clothes foa canter In Central Park. For 21 years I have averaged writing 8,500 words a week. Voice: "Why not call It a day7" No columnist ever cre ated a character to equal Don Mar quis' "The Old Soak." The most fu tile hour of the day netween 6 and 7 in the evening. Tempus fuglts: In a children s party for a group around 12 years of age not one had ever heard of Mary Pickford. Most accomplished amateur magician: Hamlsh McLauren. the writer. Un forgettable dishes: Chicken hash at Dinty Moore's, ham steak In pine apple Juice at the Colony and press ed duck at Tour d 'Argent In Paris. Invest PIIONR t rii in my imncr hi ways siept wttn a .44 ' rnOTie bb4 t Minn Ik ' f Afe revolver under bis pillow and my maternal grandfather racked a loaded shotgun over the kitchen door. And neither would have killed a house fly. X once sat an hour In the rain In the Bola to watch Edith Wharton drive by. Disraeli Interests me as much as any figure In English his tory. My wife recently came upon a rejected love story manuscript of mine and began reading it to com pany. She read this much when X fled: "Elizabeth's gaze met hla In the eloquence of silence. Long black lashes veiled her eyes, the Hps he had so long sought slightly parted, she quivered and with a quick catch in her breath rushed toward him . . " When I returned they were still laughing. No person I know can get ao incensed over political mi. dling as Percy Crosby. I have never heard anybody In the Bronx talk like, well, say Gregory Ratoff. Prettily named rural highway. Saw Mill River road. H. T. Webster, the cartoonist, and Richard Watts, Jr., the dramatic critic, now on the same morning pa per, were both born in Parkersburg. W. Va.. but never met until recently. The first Important person X Inter viewed In New York waa Clyde Fitch, the playwright, whose kindness will never "be forgotten. He gave mo a story that saved a Job I badly needed. Few forthright artists have muck ed -up their careers so completely as John Barrymore. Favorite tree: Mag nolia In bloom. I can listen to Broad way phoneys by the hour. No class talks so entertainingly. Albert Pay son Terhune and Gelet Burgess can quote limericks all evening and never run out. I know a great Industrial ist who will go no place on Wednes day night where he cannot hear Fred Allen's broadcast. Greatest orchestra Improvement of the year Abe Ly man's, It was my task as a Zieg feld press agent to phone Marilyn Miller her first husband, Frank Car ter, had been killed In a motor acci dent. ' Most alert of the hotel press agents: The Waldorf's Ted Saucier. Royal faux pas: In saying farewell to an English duke at a dinner party Harry Silvey murmured: "Oood night, your Dukeshlp." (Copyright. 1937. McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) Use Mail Tribune want ads. FILM FREE IF RESULTS BAD Agfa-Ansco Is an-all weather film. It takes equally good pictures in shade or bright sunshine. The results are guaranteed. If a roll pf. Aefn-Ansco films fail to produce good pictures we will send it back to the factory where the moat expect technicians In the world will criticise and instruct you In the proper use of your camera, and you will receive a new roll of film free. We have had so many Inquiries on poison oak remedies lately we would like to reiterate our statement made a short time nco. Probably one of the best preventative measures is to wash with Neko Soap immediately after returning lrom the woods. The principal that gives you poison oak is an acid. Soap Is an alkali. Thia acid can be communicated from the smoke of burning oak. You do not have to make direct contact to get dermatitis. 10 cc.U40 Insulin $1.13 In "Real Enjoy the security that comes with ownership the ownership of property constantly increas ing in value the ownership of a home, the most permanent investment you can make. Let us show you how easy it is to finance a new home NOW! Timber jcMts Company oacaOM Fnd EUGENE NEWS CONTROL BOUGHT BY OLYMPIAN OLYMPIA. May 1C (AP) Fred T. Chltty, general manager of the Dally Olympian said today he had pur chased controlling Interest of tha Eugene Dally News, and would as sume active management next week, Chltty has been with the Olymp ian for the past 14 years, six of which he was general manager. He said hla successor had not yet been named. If It's Wiring or Repairing You Want. Call OLSON ELECTRIC Phone 115 3 N. Bartlett y MM L0ANS fiHYnuB r.e!: W.NATHRF SECURITY v Co- . lie. ,eV Wealth" of N. Cfntral