Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 25, 1937, Page 4, Image 4

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    MTCDFOTtD MATT. TRIBUNE, fEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. MAY 25. 1937.
"Ititjom la oothT Oregon
Mdi thm alai) Trirtoae"
Dallj Kicapt ftatardar
. u arnv-B rt uaiNTI Mfl i"0
fft-lf- N. rtr St. Psoas U
ROBERT W. BUHU Editor
' BRNB6T R. Q1L8TRAP, Maoaaer
Aa ladapandant Nawapaper
- matt ai Uad
J nntlar Yet at UkTCB I. Ill
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Wf Mill In Advaocvr
aiir. oo rear !
Dally. li montha... 1
Dally, on monin Vlllilli "..'i.
r Carrier. In Advaoea Madfortt Ash
nd. Jackion villa. CantraJ Point,
Phoonl. Talent. Ooid Hill na
Pally, on rr !
Daily, ill montha... ....
Dal If. on month
All term a. eeab IB aoaoc.
Official Ppr of tb City of Mtdford
Off lei J Paper of Jafkaop Coon.?
MEMBER Or 111 E AS8O0IATKB PR EM
BcieuB mil -
The Aaaociaiaa P'aaa W -lolutlvolr on
tttlod to tho dh (or publication of il
dlapatcfaa or.d!trt to It or other
wtaa eradltad to ihia paper, and alao u
"ill rh7forpubHc;.rn "of -pedal
ai.patcnes n.r.m r --
UEMBBR. OF IINITBD PUBS
MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
CfftfM In New Torn. Ohlc.eo, D.lro It.
S.O Francl.co. U. Angeles. Seattle,
rurlltod. at. Low Atl.nta. Vanoom.r,
n. c.
Ye Smudge Pot
ay Art bur Perry.
Thi rmvamor warm the people W
beware of dtjmagoguea, and bU their
prechM snd promises. The advice
11 good, but wilt not be timely unill
the League of Younff Demagogues la
organised, and starts enttng and
talking.
"LION TAMER THINKS HIS KEXT
JOB WILL BE WITH NEWSPAPER"
(Hdllne Coo Bay Times) He haa
never been bearded In hla aanctum
by man-eating aubaciiber.
The Prospect ball tenm Journeyed
te Chlloquln Sunday, and were ath
letically scalped.
Stepa have been taken by Profea
elonal Friends of the Parmer to pro
tect hla cropa from strike disturb
ances. Thla was attempted at the
laat session of the legislature, and
waa neatly thwarted by proteaalonal
and bosom friends of the farmer.
The Issue la now out In the open
where the farmer Is apt to need pro
tection for both hla cropa, and nil
188 primary vote.
A $600 German police dog 1 In our
midst. It won't take many canines at
that price, to whittle down the Oer
man war debt.
ye scrims nnn.s OVER
(SIklvoti News)
"The aory to which he refers
waa reported ns a routine mat
ter of news. It may not be newa
when any egotistical small town
taxpayer throws Insults In the
teeth of hts fellow townsmen.
It decidedly Is news when an
elected official of a city emu
late a bellowing behemoth, and
lets hla tongue, bridled or un
bridled, so fsr forget the dictates
of good taste, to put It char
itably, that he affronts doeena
of fellow members of an organi
sation and throws a meeting
Into wild confusion."
J. Cochran Robin caught the first
caterpillar of the season yeaterday
before it canned an Older Olrl to
scresm.
t
A group of local reactionaries met
Monday pm. by chance, and recalled
when "Preserve, conserve and serve
with Hoover" was threatened as
campaign slogan. They did not link
the alliteration with what has hap
pened to them since.
t
Another weeding is needed to be
olemnlwd on the Bsptlat church
lawn. ,
Advice Is Inundating the high
school graduatea of the land, from
the pulpit and the press. They have,
as yet, not been warned not to tilt
the sharp curves at 73 mph. en route
to receive their diploma.
The usual end of May hay and
rain are not mixing.
"We hsd n Invitation from the
committee at San Francisco to at
tend the fiesta occasioned by the
opening or the a olden Gate bridge
We notified the authorities that we
omildn't come, but we notice they
are going ahead and holding the
celebration anyway." (Corvallla Os
rette-Tlmes) Modest violet Item
Old age pensions and a 5day week
now loom by high court edict. Noth
Ing remains to do but try and get
them.
Third Old Age .Meet
WAftHINOTON, May 35 (UF
The third national convention of the
Town send old-spe penston clubs will
be held here July il-35. It waa an
nounced last night. Edward P. Kcm
mer, convention manar, estimated
that 10.000 delegatea will attend.
Freed to rrovhle
OAULM, Ore., M.y 34. (UP) Be
cauae he could not support hla fam
ily while In Jail, Lee Hart, aervlng
a 00-day aentence In Multnomah
county Jail for falsifying a relief ap
plication, waa granted exc-utlve par
don by Governor Chnrlea H Martin
today. He had served 33 of the 00
daya.
Phone Ml We'll nam aa yum
rafuN. Cite ctaoitary Service,
Adnrtl.los .Lpreeentall.ee
President Should Explain
""pHE battle for the iuprme eourt bill, will eontinue," d-
clar Senator Robinaon.
Thia word from the Demcratic leader in the opper hou
makea it official.
Why!
Why must the battle, continue t ,
For i long time, thoae opposing the measure, both Demo,
crate and Republicans, have failed to understand why the ad
ministration doesn't withdraw, the bill, and forget it. When the
objectives of an offensive have been reached why keep on fight-
ing
Such a course appeara to be contrary to all the accepted
rules of good tactics, military, political, or what have you.
OUT the fight WILL go on. Strange, very strange!
Now with Social Security upheld; what is in reality a
new NRA, introduced;' a modified AAA functioning; the Wag
ner Act sustained; and the resignation of Justice Van Devanter,
giving the President a vacancy on the court to fill, what
rhyme or reason is there in continuing the conflictt
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT gave as his reason 'for asking,
power to change the character of the Supreme Court, the
fact that the court waa an obstacle to the carrying out of his
program.
But what PORTION of his program, ia opposed by the pres
ent court, and ia likely to be opposed, when the present liberal
majority of five, ia increased by the President's appointment to
six!
The time has come, in our judgment, when the President
should explain. Another fireside chat, from the White House, ia
in order.
KJOT only are the opponenta of the original bill, up a tree, but
' we are convinced the backers of the proposition, are suf
fering from a similar confusion. They don't where they ar at.
and the doubt ia beginning to spread, as to whether or not, tho
President does. '
Can it merely be willfulness,
opinion? We can't believe that.
tification for the bill what little there was at the outset has
been completely destroyed, and we can conceive of no lew
evidence that would chnnge our opinion.
But that in only OUR opinion
lieves otherwise. And he MUST have some reason. He must
have something up his sleeve which he hasn't divulged.
The time has come, in our
should roll up his sleeves, put
the people of the country into
WHY, his fight against the Supreme Court MUST go on.
Everyone respects a man, who, regardless of the odds will
fight to the end, for a principle.
and there can be little popular
the principle isn't known or can't
The time has come to name it I
Democracy
CTANLET BALDWIN'S remarkable valedictory as Prime
Minister of England, addressed primarily to the youth of
Great Britain, could with inspiration and great advantage be
read by the young people of America.
"We are passing. You are the
said. "We vest in you the duty
what is worthy and worthwhile
our traditions. . . . And it will be
racies in whatever form of empire you may live. They must be
defended from without, and equally they have to be defended
from within. And it may well
democracy from itself."
THE estate which British youth inherits, as described by Mr
nnl.fin 1 aloft lha e,a,t lH nl.,'nU A n. Aclno a fnnlh r II?
heir, but to an even greater degree. The beauty of the country
side, the treasures of art and literature, the accumulated moral
and material wealth, and the freedom, ordered freedom with
in the law, "with force in the
ground," are to be found here as bounteously as in England
And, of course, the obligation and the necessity of safeguarding
hem exists here as well as there.
For proof that this heritage is in danger it is only necessary
o look here and there on the Continent. Where the rule of the
dictator is supreme the1 meaning
democracy is nothing more than
tniita of the free spirit of men do not. grow in the garden of
tyranny." declares Mr. Baldwin, and his statement is a self-
evident truth which finds substantiation in those domains where
litler, Mussolini and Stalin dominate the scene and where
young men are being prepared
ocracy. R. S.
UNION DRIVE IS
CARRIED 10 GATES
OF FORD MOTOR CO.
DETROIT. May 2f. D The
United Automobile Workera of Amer
ica, openlnf two branch office In
abandoned bank bulldlnga at the ed(e
of Dearborn today, announced plan
for distributing union literature at
the galea of the Ford Motor company.
One leaflet will demand a alx-hour
day and a minimum wage of fl a
day
The announcement waa made oy
Walter Reuther, president of the
weat-alde local, ahortly after the high
command of the U. A. W. A. had pre
vailed upon a 000 Oenera.1 Motor
employe to return to work at 8t-
Inav, ending "unauthorised' atrike
Iin three Chevrolet planu
A Dearborn city ordinance require
a permit for dUtrbutlon of hind-
bills. Reuther aatd the Dearborn
city clerk had promised to mall iuch
permit to the union
ford employe now work nt &t-
pique, a stubborn pride of
We do believe there U no jus
of course. The President be
judgment, when the President
all his cards on the table, take-
his confidence, and show just
But there is no such feeling
support or enthusiasm when
even be named.
s Heritage
governors of the future," he
of guarding and safeguarding
in our past, our heritage and
for you to protect the democ
be that you will have to save
background Biid not in the fore
of liberty has been lost and
a byword and a jest. "The
for sacrifice in defense of au
hour day a week. The minimum
waice la 6 a day. Several time re
cently Henry Ford haa declared that
the company will put some "really
high wagea" Into effect "when thi
fttrtke meaa 1 over."
Reuther ald the distribution of
union literature would be the first
attempted at the Ford gate.
The president of the local whose
JurlMictlon Include the Ford Rouge
plant id that 'untontam, not Ford
lam" would be the alogan of the
campaign to orgnntre Ford employee
Sign on the brunch office which
arc on the Detroit elde of trcetf
marking the Dearborn boundary
will read: "The union way la the
American way "; "Make Ford a union
hopl" "Make Detroit 100 percent
union. and "Yesterday O- M Today
Ford."
CarelcM I'lrenien
ROCK FORD. III.. May 3 (UP
Fireman Ward Hubbell flipped a
match Into a drain In No. I fire ta
tton today. A nearby gaeoline can ex
ploded. Hubbell and Fireman oy
Morgan were Injured; three piece
of apparatua were acorched
rompO!er" In phone Itook
CT.KVBl.AND. O. (UP) Famous
eompowrt are well represented In
Cleveland a newest telephone direc
tory. The book reveal nine Buche,
elg-t Mendelaaohna. seven Pchuherts
five Hundelj. three Haydn, three
MacowtlU, to Ntwn and a Vtidi
Personal Health Service
By William
aiin.d letter, pertalnlnc to perwul nnlth ao4 hjjltnfc sot tfl dlMut
dliino.l. or. treatment, will be uusered by Dr. Brad; u (temped telf.
addreued envelope ti enclosed. Letten .hoold be brief and written In ink
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be aarmrad
No repl. can ba made to querlet not conforming to uwtructlona. addree.
Dr. William Bradj. 264 CJ Camlno. Beterl, Cam.
THE REJl VENA
Rejuvenation mean regeneration.
return of cells or ttaaues which have
degenerated or grown old premature
ly to their origi
nal healthy vig
orous vitality. Or
In short it la res
toration of vlte.
Until the next
edition of Web
ster appeara, vlte
means better
than- average
nutritional con
dltlon as mani
fested in lower
death rates, bet
ter growth and
development, ex
tension of the prime of Ufa In both
directions, material improvement or
the life expectation of adults, higher
average level of poatlve health
throughout the life cycle, greater
pep, more vitality, Jole de vlvre, the
highest degree of natural immunity,
an adequate fund of reserve power
to tide over emergencies and strains,
the resiliency of the untamed animal
or the unconquered savage. Two
readers Mrs. Flora Davenport of
Vesta burg, Michigan, and Mrs. Edith
A, Murdock of Mtltngton, collaborat
ed with me In coining the word vlte.
but we have no copyright on it and
we contribute It to the general cir
culation. The rej uvena t Ion diet Is not a
rigid one for a particular condition
only the physician who knows the
Individual's condition cen prescribe
such a diet but rather purporta to
be a standard or form to guide those
who. from faulty nutrition, begin to
grow Infirm and aged at thirty or
forty.
Met and Youth
Here is the skeleton plan or out
line for the corrective protective, re
generation diet, the items being chos
en aa most essential for normal nu
trition, providing plenty of calcium
and phosphorus and other mineral
elements usually lacking In the diet
of urban dwellers, leaving an alka
line ash which tends to prevent acid
osis, also conetining a maximum of
such vitamins ft are obtainable in
NEW YORK. May 3ft Along any of
those tumbly and wretched tenement
stroeU that come to dead enda la al
ways a tacky candy store or soft
drink stand that
is the clearing
house of gossip.
A music box is
toothed to some
last year's air or
a radio la In con
stant jangle.
Every doorway
and window
frames a silent,
stony-faced fig
ure making
amends for
obaourlty
In thought. In the glow of the bry
evening sky the children play half
heartedly their made-up games. No
section of New York appear so placid,
yet underneath are so tense.
What Impresses the Btrsnger Is the
absence ol talk. As though words
were futile. Now and then some pat
riarch will mumble something In hU
beard to nobody In particular and re
turn to hla meditation. If you speAk
they will nod gravely, but rarely with
a smile.
Oddly, soclaloglsta find little social
unrest among such aubmerged. They
are untouched by class Jealousies.
They have arrived appropriately
enough at life's dead end. Eddied
hopelessly to the last atop In the so
cial scale; nothing much matters.
And speaking of silence, there la
always a hush, a cud chewing Indo
lence, about the mariners who make
their headquarters at the Seamen's
Institute on South stroet. Sailors are
quiet at sea but particularly Inar
ticulate on lnnd. I have seen them
standing In groups at the curb puff
ing plpea and never saying a word.
At the lunch stands In the neighbor
hood the countermen say sesmen may
come In together but it ia rare they
exchange conversation. They seem
gravid with memorte and uninter
ested in thlnga to come.
Osmblers are notoriously reputed
as tu;ht lipped. Arnold Rot hate in was
sitting for hour In a corner, back
to wall, with his guard in restau
rant and expressing himself with
clipped monosyllables at long Inter
val. But he was an exception. Most
of them around town who make gam
ing a profession are more often gar
tulous and loud-mouthed. Historians
ay the most gentlemanly and mild
voiced gambler the metropolis ever
knew was Richard Csnfleld. He not
only was a silent mnn but would nM
permit bolster in his gambling salon.
He honestly believed games of chance
were respectable diversion and tried
in every way to make them so. Whist
ler was his friend.
There is a Park avenue doorman
who iscd to be a croupier at Can
fields He tells me it was not unusual
for big winner to toe him si.ooo at
the end of a ntglit'a plav. At the time
the raiders axe ended the CanfleM
establishment he hsd saved IT .000 In
nine yenrs. He knew the haearda of
gambling, yet he wanted to mafce
tiwcoo. return to hts native Ireland
snd become a member of the landd
jentry. He lost It in Wall Street in
two weeks.
It 1 ever Interesting to knw what
flour- Miain (nnata-f F i I f f 1 rl n t frlT
retirement. At Henrv Sell's a young
m nn i?i ,iu SJtiii rvr noviia quit loniw
row U he hsd U00.0CO invested safe
Brady, M.P.
TION REGIMEN
food. As outlined the diet la a moder
ate reduction regimen for most adults,
especially for the who are at all
overweight and of sedentary hbit.
Breakfast
Calorie
Any fresh fruit or fruit Juice
In season or tomato or to
mato Juice (canned tomato
or tomato Juice If fresh not
available) 100
Two eggs cooked as you like.. 160
One or two glasses of milk....
Ma- ISO
If any bread or cereal is tok
en let It be made entirely
of plain wheat, oats, corn,
rye or other grain, not of
any refined cereal product- AO
With butter 70
Lunch
(For overweight, sedentary
person over 30 years of sge.)
Two glasses of pure fresh rsw
milk (certified or aa second
choice grade A raw from
tuberculin tested herd or
as third choice ordinary
grade A pasteurised mllk)180
And either whole grain crack
er or bread or any fresh
fruit In season m 80
If preferred, buttermilk, sour
milk, cultured or lactic acid
milk beverage of which milk
Is the chief Ingredient may
be taken.
(For reasonably active person
or one not overweight or
one under thirty).
One-third head of lettuce...... lfl
Tablespoonful salad oil 90
Lemon Juice Instead of vine
gar - o
Two freah vegetables SO
Equivalent of whole wheat
bread or crackers or shred
ded wheat biscuit or bran
and wheat germ gem ,..... 60
With butter , so
Two glasses of milk 160
Fresh fruit .. 80
(Copyright, 1937, John F. DUle Co.)
Ed Note: persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
hould send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D- 285 E)
Camlno. Beverly 'Hills. Calif.
ly at 4 peroent, thua bringing an an
nual Income of 18,000. A man past flu
thought a half million well secured
was ample and would permit the
care-free life he deal red. A gentleman
of 61 did not believe anyone could
make a half million and quit. By
that time, he argued, money making
was in the blood and nothing short
of a million would be the goal, it was
his experience that men did not care
ao much about the million as to
achieve the rating of millionaire. And
he was probably right.
When I was a gar-mouthed Jasper
In a small town the richest citlren
was a banker with neatly clipped
side-burns who lived In the finest
home and sent hts children to ex
pensive colleges. Yet I have been told
his entire estate was between 950.000
and $75,000. But thoae were the days
when a 30-cent steak with a hunk
of liver for the cat tossed In was
the butcher's highest-priced cut. And
tho hired girl for $3 a week did the
week's washing along with the cook
ing, hot ise -clean Ing. etc. Indeed the
horse snd buggy days of the modern
jeer.
Followers of F. P. A. are hoping he
resumes his column somewhere, after
sbandonlng one he long conducted
following a salary dtspte. He ia the
last of the paragraphic commentators
who followed the B. h. T. formula of
depending chiefly on contributora for
the brightest mots. Many of his "con
trlbs" got their first taste of fame
through hla selections of their bsn
ter. Such aa Dorothy Parker, Deems
Taylor, Marc Connolly. Russell
Crouse and George 8. Kaufman.
From a mystery novel: "She said
the thing fell at her feet suddenly
on the dark street, something thst
appeared robed In black with a snowy
white top knot.' '
Reads like a Supreme Court Justice
being dropped.
(Copyright 1037. McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
ARSON LEADS IN
CRIMINAL DEEDS
SALEM, Or.. May 3B.(AP Burn
ing leds the list of criminal of
fenses In the general law enforcement
of the state police.
Five arresta were mads during April
for arson, resulting In sentences to
taling 30 years tn the state peniten
tiary. The state police report showed
sentences of 03 years meted out to
violator and fines of 81323 levied In
the general law division. Moat fines
were paid by those charged with
drunkenness. 9314 against S3 arrests.
Arrests reached 1P8.
In the same division fishing with
out licenses produced $753 in fines,
the report showed, with 44 violator
arrested. Fines In this department
totaled 93 959 and 139 arrests.
Driving while Intoxicated contin
ued at the top In the traffic division
arrests, 30 arrests resulting in floe
of 91,237 and many Jail sentences.
The patrols reported 754 arrest and
fines totaling 88,153.
Be Correctly Corseted tn
AN ARTIST MODEL by
Rtnelwyn B Hoffmann
MODERN WOMti
Need Net tW w aseathry pais aad delay dua tr
r.tlet. MTouf triD. f i tvur or tiauiar ctutii.
Chi h-teri Putootxi Hiaad filli araaflectiva
Comment
on the
Day s News
By FRANK JENKINS
A READER at Dunamutr offers
this recipe for the considera
tion of the motoring public:
"Take on reckless, natural -born
fool, three drinks of bad
liquor and a fast, high-powered
car. Soak the fool In the liquor,
place in the car and let him go.
After due time, remove from the
wreckage, place In a black, satin
lined box and garnish with flow
ers." It's a recipe, unfortunately, that's
entirely too popular.
A SANTA MARIA (California) mo
torlat la killed while attempting
to run over a aqulrre! eroailng the
highway. He saw the squirrel dart
ing across the road and swerved In
an attempt to hit It with a wheel.
Ha car plunged over an embank
ment. WELL. If he had a family depend
ent on him, It's too bad. But If
he waa alone in the world, It may be
Juat as well.
People who fall Into the habit of
DELIBERATELY awervlng automo
bile. In order to kill ANYTHING can
be got along without.
"JUT." somebody will ask dtscon
O certlngly at this point, "what Is
the difference between killing a
ground squirrel with sn automobile
snd killing the same squirrel with a
22 rifle?"
"Or, for that matter, whst's the
REAL difference between killing a
ground squirrel In the road and kill
ing a deer out In the woods? Or a
duck up In the air?"
THAT is a stumper, for a fact.
About all this writer (who likes
to shoot ground squirrels with a .33,
LOVES to shoot ducks with a shot
gun, but haa more or less outgrown
the desire to slay deer) can do In the
emergency Is to fall back on the ar
gument that swerving automobile
on the highway is a bad habit to get
into.
Admittedly, though, If, a rather
lame agrument.
AND down In Lsguna Beach (the
news aeems to run heavily to
California today) the sovereign vot
ers in a referendum election RE
PEAL an ordinance requiring all per
sona appearing in the shopping dis
trict to be clothed from the neck to
the knee.
So It la announced that hereafter
It will be perfectly legal to go shop
ping In Laguna Beach In a bathing
suit.
THAT'S fine, and It's grand to
know that the peopl of Laguna
Beach have assorted their personal
freedom. But w'o really wants to
go ahopplng In a bathing suit?
SOVIET AVIATORS
ON POLE ICE ELOE
OF
MOSCOW, May 3S (A1) Swirling
fog clamped down on the Soviet
union's air and weather base In a
drifting Ice floe at the top of the
world today, forbidding for a day
at least the flight of three supply
planes from Rudolf tslanda.
Ivan Papanln, commander of the
base, reported by radio at 7 a. m.
(midnight Monday, E. S. T.) that the
sky waa "completely overcast by fog"
witn visibility limited to 900 meters
(1.640 feet). The temperature was
104 degrees above zero, Fahrenheit.
At the Rudolf l.land base, about
560 miles from the 13 aeronautical
explorera who landed near the poie
Friday afternoon, the celling was re.
ported leas than 300 meters with a
dense fog on the ground. It was 14
above aero there.
Meteorologists had hoped that the
fog would pass by today and enable
the apparatus and food-carrying sup
ply ships to complete establishment
of the air and weather outpost which
the Soviet wl.hea to use to guide
a fllsht arrow the pole to the United
States.
Preparation, for this latter dash
through the Icy backyard of the world
were being polished In Moscow by
Sislimimd Levanefraky, American
trained pilot. Hla flight may be the
forerunner of regular commercial
flying over this route.
Graphic details of how the Ice floe
was turned Into a landing ground
for the polar pioneers on Friday came
to light here. The expedition mada
lire of Its footing before setting ir
plane down by dropping cannon b.:i,
and paper bags filed with colored
powder.
LAWN MOWERS sharpened. Wa c.l l
and del Sims Bros . re I 261 73 N. m
NOTED SPECIALISTS
Successfully tragi Rectal, Celea
nal Stomach Ailments
With la city rattt) ia thi
p!4t aas meat air-frwacttl
Ctlai ia tha t Itr mat
mant f Pil in 4 tfctr
Racial afltl Co lea iiiorcUri;
la Stetaarh ailmtnta- iv
(afactary raault aaaurttL
Ms heir t ft! tarfteal optritlea. Ns cenflna
rtnt, tnd ff valuasla Fr Baekltt tedi)
Dr.C. J. DEAN CLINIC
Pkrlttmm aaf Bwrg
N g. Cerntr Furnsidt and Grand Avaau
TflfpHena lAit 34 1 1 Portland Orr?n
(Continued trots Page One I
However, the Incoming congres
sional mall does not Indicate the
country la very excited about many
pending Issues. It Is Impossible to
tell what the leglalatora will do
when the heat starts shortly.
Initial quiet preparations looking
oward eventual adjournment were
begun laat week. The resolution con
tinuing existing nuisance taxee was
Introduced. Arrangementa were be
gun for a third deficiency appropria
tion bill. Work on the other neces
sary governmental appropriation bills
waa pushed slong.
The leadera have an Idea that, if
they can get the supreme court
Issue out of the way. they will be
able to trim the remainder of the
program for adjournment In short
order. They neve an idea the court
dispute haa needlessly spoiled or de
tracted from orderly legislstlon ar
rangements. Few noticed it. but House leader
Rayburn expressed his displeasure
mildly the other day to the bouse,
saying the court bill "has clouded
the atmosphere" so that work done
by the house has not been recog
nized. Outlook for legislation may be dia
cloaed authoritatively aa follows to
day, aubject to trimming later:
The antl-lynchlng bill, passed by
the house, appears likely to be
crowded out In the last Jam by a
senate filibuster. Two other house
bllla likely to fall In the senate are
the Pettlnglll long snd short haul
and the Vinson atream pollution
bills.
No one knowa yet what will be
dona about minimum wagea and
houra or the power planning pro
gram, but both probably will be
passed under Insistence from the
White House. The omnibus cure-all
farm bill, contalnlnr Just about
every known remedy suggested by
anyone In the rst five years, may
be aqueered through hurriedly near
the end of the aesslon, although
leaders now deny It.
A flood control bill carrying only
about H 1.000,000 win probably be
passed. The omnibua rivers and har
bora bill will get through (congress
men never fall to paea a rlvera and
harbors bill), but the Florida ship
canal bill will not. The Wagner hous
ing bill seems doomed. Extension of
PWA for two years will be enacted.
Presidential advlsera have been try
ing to get something started on the
White House government reorganiza
tion program.
Unobjected minor features may be
put through to appease the White
House, but not the entire program.
The aupreme court bill la, ot
course, dying on its feet, but they
have not yet found a place to lay
It. Railroad retirement legislation
will psss. Sugar la stuck In a tussle
between conflicting lobby Interests
and no one knows what will happen
to It. The farm tenant bill la slated
to csrry only $10,000,000, but spon
sors hsve lost Interest In that
amount and It may go over until
next aesslon.
House membera are working on
another pure food and drug bill,
which will be lost In the shuffle, as
will the house naval committee bill
to authorize t48.000.000 for a naval
auxiliary ahlp program. Mr. R. will
win his CCC dlapute with congress.
The final relief appropriation prob
ably will be (1, 250.000.000. aa pre
viously reported.
What this all meana Is that con
gress wsnta to cut everything to bsre
essentials and go home, or vice
vrsa, and Mr. R, has a problem on
his hand..
mm
I
(
On Our New
Installment Note
Purchase Plan
24 MONTHS TO PAY
Timber PRtyoffirp Company
a.aosoo Vti 4. oaeoos.
PHONf 7
Flight 'o Time
Mcdford and Jackson County
ntstory rrom the tile, of the
Mail Tribune 10 and to yeaa
ago.
TEN TEARS AGO TODAY
May 25, 192T
(It waa Wednesday)
Colonel Lindbergh to sail for noma
June 23 on American destroyer. Air
hero la "girl shy." American youth
of all ages Idolize new hero.
Second trial of Hugh DeAutremont
to atArt June 6 at Jacksonville.
Rnei.nrf inH Rusala "near break
over diplomatic encroachments.
Mercury goes to 77 degrees and fair
weather Is predicted.
Louis J. Upp and fsmlly of Dodge
City, Has., will make their home
here. The Upps were former neigh
bors of Charles A. Wing In Kansas.
Erneat Scott is elected president of
the Lions club.
Work started on new city hall at
Central avenue and Fifth atreet.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAT
May 25. 11UT
(It waa Wednesday)
Allies plan new drives on western
front; congress passes wax tax bill
by overwhelming vote. . .
Bill before congress for food con
trol for nation during war emergency.
Herbert Hoover will be food coneer-
vatlon administrator.
The public schools here will not
open until October 1 next fall to en
able students to help tn the harvest
ing of the fruit crop.
"Lucky Strike" cigarettes make ap
pearance In local stores for first time.
Heat plant asked for county court
house by grand Jury. J. H. Cooley
was foreman.
Barnum hotel to be remodeled Into
an apartment house.
Tax collections show Increase over
year ago, Sheriff Jennings reports.
Irate Taxpayer
JOLIET, 111.. May 25. (Up) Be
cause her automobile lacked stats
and city license tags Judge Wlll:am
Nicholson fined Mrs. Paul Ournltz $3
today and assessed her 914 for license
fees. "It's too much money." said
Mrs. Ournltz. "Take the car." Police
will try It out as a squad car.
Baby Ha Two Teeth
ASHTABULA. (UP) Gurgling her
pleasure, Joan Carol Archibald dis
plays two tiny teeth that have strug
gled through her gums although she
is only one month old. Most babies
start cutting teeth at three months
and It Is usually six months before
they are actually out of the gums.
I i1 ! l I fcTll L I aiJf;i il
SANTISEPT1C LOTION is guaranteed
to quickly elim inate Poison Oak or money
back. Absolutely non-messy, non-greasy.
Stop, itching immediately. Be wise ac
cept no substitute. At your druggist 50
You Can
REMODEL
MODERNIZE
REPAIR
rnd of s. Central
r