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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1937)
4 PAGE 8TX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. TTEPyESDAY, .TUNE 16. 1937. MedforivITbibuke 'EtmAM t ftootlira Orego Um4 IM Mali Trlbus." Save Our Streets Dalt; Eicept glnrT. Published by tt M.ll M Vlr ft. Fbeo fl ROBERT W.BUHU dltor. - ERNEST It. OIU8TRAP. Uaoaer. l4pD4nt Hswtpanr. Cat u eoa-ela matter "l- M,. Or.0D. under Act of Marco . ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily, ttl Mir. ''.'.'..'!!".? Dally! on month -.V' Y wh : . fifSnli" Tal.tt. Ool Hill aad 01. Dallr. en rr. J 51 Dally. ni"".- ....... .I All terms, cash In advenes. Official ftp" '", MMllmd Official I'aner Jfo HCUHK OP TUB A?0'TKI I PKKM "S AMOCI.I.O Pres. '"''"'' till t lb DM for publication of all .".V d'.p.tth.s cndUa to It or other It ertaltad to thl PSP'' ano alto to tha local published htrtln. All rlpma for publication of aoaelal dltpatohaa htrtln ara alto rtttrvto. MEMBER or i;mtbp pres MEMBER Of AUDIT BUREAU Ur Uini.uun."'"- Aovtrtttln Rtprtstntttlvii a.,. .tt rhir-itn. Detroit, ?.r"ci'..'" ,r.:" t.;. At. .i v. a 1 1 1 1. p rlland. SL Loult. Aljtnta, Vtncouver, Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Parry. or.ii Britain, along with Italy, an ail other Buronean nation, ave oi.i.nx hava served notloe on " America of defaulta on their wr m-a Mvminu. Tlirv aeem to be affiliated with tha C. T. O. U. t t t a M.Mant of Nova Seotl bat Mibn a latter detalllne how Don navllle Dam power ihouUl ba dla- trlbutad. Ha knowa no mora aooui n than If high water in tha Oolumbla river wished away hi plf pan avery yaar. t A LADS FLARES UP (Warren (0.) Chrnnlrlr) '7 think It la disgraceful tha way people let thalr doga run around. I aaw i dogi at one place, and for children to aea the golng'a on la terrible. I aay, keep your dog home or go out and iee what ha la doing. "MM. ." Thomas Carleton, tha riounos RJt cow-man re porta tha grata looka o tender on hla aummer range, he can hardly keep from eating It himself t O. Olsen, who runa a maglo Ian- Urn place . at Treks, waa In our mldat Tile. Tha laat tlma ha waa hara, he waa raiting a red beard to emphasise hla civic gumption. It 1 ka Ilka rain on Friday, elec tion day. If It doea It will ruin tha tithing, and people who wada In Rogue river all aummer long, can't Journey to tha pollt, and gat their feet wet. HOW TIMES (Praia niipatch) Washington, June la (API Tha Re public Steal cor poration filed ault In federal dlatrlot court today to compel tha poat offlca department to d e 1 1 t tr pack age! to tta atrtke betleged plant at Warren and Nllet. Ohio. CHANGE! (Newsdom) President Cleve land aald during tha Pullman itrika of lata: "If It takei the entire Army and Navy to deliver a poatal card In Chicago, thai card will ba da llvered." I. Roatel ha returned from Port land. Ha la tha Crater Lake publicist. Thla la a good atart toward winding up a Joumallit. Parmtrt have started reported early rlalng to milk tha cow. Tha moat popular hour I 4:80 a.m. Why do farmer ao allege? It le bad for them, and the rest of ua, and thej cow doesn't Ilka It either. One of the Older Girls has been dieting ti nee April .0 to ba stylish, and Dame Fashion It now two pound ahead. The aataemed Oregonlan, edito rially dlscnsae "The Corn on the Cob Problem." The problem at this aeaaon, la to get corn on the cob ftnd hava a problem. F your motor car develops a knock in the engine what do yon dot Let it go on and knock, until the motor fall outl No, you find the cause of th knock and hava it removed. Ton repair tha break, or have it repaired, to aa to lave your car, and get the maximum service out of it, at tha minimum expense. This is only good business and common sense. Trying to save a few dollars on needed repairs, it tha most foolhardy form of extravagance, where motor cars are concerned. It means buying a new car avery few years, and throwing the old car, a total loss, on tha scrap heap. t e WELt, the same principle applies to a paved street. The people of Medford have approximately a million dollars Invested in city pavements, but a large proportion of them have broken down, and are in need of immediate repair and reconstruction. What should ba done, let them go, because it will take a few dollars from the pocket of the average tax payer to put them in proper shape t Obviously not For such a course, would mean to follow "the penny wise pound foolish" policy, to the point of sustain ing an expenditure not of a few thousand dollars, but hundreds of thousands of dollars, not patching and repairing a few miles of streets, but constructing an entirely new'system, Aa with a motor car, so with paved streets, to make needed repairs now, is simply a matter of good business and common sense. It means, saving a million dollar investment, at the minimum instead of the maximum expense. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letter perlalolng to personal health and hygiene, not to dlteair dlagnoela or treatment. w1U 0 answered by Dr. Brady It a tumped self, addressed envelop I enclosed. Uttar should be brief and written In ink Owing to tha large number of latter received only a few ran ba answered No reply can b made to qoerlet not eonrormlng to Instruction Address Dr, William Brady, 2SJ El Caaalna, Beverly, cam. IMMVNTT VERS VI RESISTANCE i 1 it iaSBBBaBBSBVBBaBBSJ IT would be very nice if atreets would maintain themselves, but they won't. Nor can they be maintained without using money. The thing to do of course Is to maintain them, at the minimum expense to the tax payers. This means adhering to the old rule of "a stitch in time eaves nine." It means, in the case of Medford, in making these necessary repairs NOW, instead of deferring them, until from the standpoint of good business and economy, it will be too late. Day after tomorrow (Friday) a special election will be held to decide this question. The proposal to raise a few thousand dollars, to save our streets should be passed by an overwhelming majority. And if the progressive and public spirited citizens of Med ford do their duty and GO TO THE POLLS, we are confident it will be. Time to Call a Halt Selective tarring rlnn PORTLAND, June IS. T) 3u tatned foresta and atablllrtd payrolls bi nearer for all western timber dia- trier aa a reault of a system of ae. lerttva Inning developed by tha Pa elflo Northwest Experiment nation, . J. Buck, regional forester for the V. ft. forest ervlc aald. Named Red Heart tjueen PORTLAND, June 16 iTl Made lyn Thompson of Ocean Lake w,tn I ,SSS ooo votes, waa elected queen of tha Tift rod head roundup over five rlvwl candidates, tabulation of votes hara last night disclosed. Crash Claim Two PORTLAND, June IS (;1 Prank arravalle. 51, died laat night In a hoe plul of Injuries received Sunday when a car in which he a a pat arnger crashed Into a barber shop here Sunday. Oaetano Galium, driv er of the car, was Instantly killed. Home Stale Honeymoon PORTLAND, June 1. jpi Oregon beachea will be perfectly satisfactory for a honeymoon. Mayor Joseph K. Carson and hla bride-elect, Mlts Myr. tie Cradlck, aald at they secured a marriage lleenaa here. The couple will be married Saturday evening. find ourselves in agreement with Colby M. Chester, chairman of the National Association of Manufacturers, who delivered a speech in Boston yesterday, on the state of the nation from the labor standpoint. Declaring that modern enlightened business management believes it is economic suicide to advocate the payment of unfairly low wages, Mr. Chester went on to sayi "Enlightened management, and by that I mean honeat management, want and datlrea to function harmoniously with labor; but It take two to haka hand, and the soonsr that I reallaed the sooner will tha publics patlanoa be reatored. A a matter of fact, I believe tha majority of employee ara realising It aa weU aa tha majority of employer. "Buslnew antarprlaea aubmlt audited financial raporta to thalr stockholders. Soma union with reputedly mora stock holdera than any Induttrlal corporation do not aubmlt financial raporta to their rank and fll memberahlp, and tha public la beginning to wonder why. That certainly la tha businesslike way to do; moreover, It la tha honest thing to do. Parhapa labor . memberahlp will do It voluntarily rather than await legal re quirement. "Offlcera and agent of buslneaa ooncern accept legal ra ponalbllltle for their acta. It seem only reasonable that offlcera and agent of labor organisation should accept similar responsibility. "Strikes today dominate the headlines. Certainly manage ment doea not deny labor'a right to strike. But It does ask, and In thla I believe It has publlo support, that a strike ahould only be sanctioned when It Is approved by a majority of labor member, acting after sober discussion and secret ballot. 'I am definitely of tha opinion that a general atrtke, cautlng hardship to counties Innocent hyttandera and great financial loot to everyone, doea not meet with publlo approval. And certainly there la no support whatever for the Illegal occupation of property belonging to othera tha publlo la In tha mood for good times and harmony. It la saying. In affect, 'Cut out all tha wrauglng and lat a get down to business. There's plenty of room for all and plenty for all in thla abundant land so let'a go'." That doctrine strikes us as pretty sound sense. With a busi- ness corporation held responsible for its acts, we can see no reason why a labor corporation, should not be willing to accept a similar obligation. This haa been the procedure adopted in Knglaiul, we sco no reason why it should not be adopted in the United States. BUT we are particularly in favor of a truce in this bickering ami wrniiirtmiy. thin fnntlnnt. Rtrikinff. from one ond of the a ml to the other, with the long suffering public as usual, the goat. We don't deny there are wrongs on both sides. What we do deny is the right of EITHER, organized labor or organized capital, to keep this country in a constant turmoil, because they refuse to place the public interest above their special selfish interest, and instead of adopting a policy of give and take, insist upon pursuing a policy of controversy and conflict. This is the fundamental cause of the present mess. And as we see it only the establishment of some system of labor courts, or the extension of the principles of the Railway Labor Act to industry as a whole, is ever poine to end it. I can't for tha life of ma aea write a man who haa had tubereu- loala for ten years, why you ara ao rabid against tha word "retlatanea." Tha correspond MasrsaaaKsaaarvaaam ant than quotes I"... a rrnM a MvthAAIr of pathology for nurses and an other teitbook of anatomy and physiology, to show that mad leal authera eon- fua "Immunity1 with "resistance or use tha term looaely and Inter. ehangeably. Fur ther na cltaa tha definition of tha word "Immunity' given in wabater freedom or eiemp tlon from any charge, duty, obliga tion, ate. This would suggest, the correspondent maintain, merely a piAslv state; whereas resistance con veys the Idea of active opposition. Moreover, m all hi exparlenea with physicians In tuberculosis hospitals and in private practice, no one haa aver seemed to msks any such to-do over the precise use of tha words aa I do. Correspondent enjoys thl col umn and profits by It, but wishes h could sea the light, It there I any that will clearly distinguish re sistance from Immunity. Now. listen. It matter little which term you apply, only so you know what you mean. Many casual or thoughtless rasdars hava accused m of similar finicking In my effort to make people crl-conscious and per suade them to llv by tha golden rule of hygiene. Tha authorltlaa cited by tha correspondent and plenty of greater authorities, hava massed up the significance, of tha terms Im munity and resistance ao much that It la difficult to clarify tha matter now. I have walked many times around my desk and rolled seversl somersault, pondering how to go about It. Ah, let'a tea what Sted msn's Medical Dictionary hss to ssy sbout It: Immunity (L.lmmunltas). A state, natural or acquired, In which tha body la resistant to disease. This definition will pleas tha tuberculous correspondent. But now let us turn to Resistance. A pasalve force, eiert ed In opposition to another and ac tive force. Nothing about active op position to dlsesse here. Mot that wa need take tha dictionary too seri ously. Itymologlsts sra not Infallible. My objection to tha ut of tha term "rcslstsnca" If you mean Im munity or If you don't know what you mean or what you are talking about It merely that It 1 to mis leading and confusing snd hinders th spread of knowledge. 1 hava tha asm objection to the use of tha term "cold" 'or "tha common cold" It you mean bronchitis, measles, In fluenza, Infantile paralysis, pneu monia or what not or if you don't know what you mean or what you ara talking about. Nobody can aay In any Instance whether a parson has any "resist ance" against a particular dlsesse or s gal rut various or all diseases. But a physician can determine m any Instance whether a person has sny immunity against diphtheria. Six weeks hence I shall hsva a reason able degree of Immunity again ty phoid and paratyphoid fever, because I have received tha first of three doses of the "vaccine" or bscterln. No ona would speak of antl -typhoid Inoculation as "Increasing resist ance"; it is specifically administered to stlmulste development of immunity. QUESTIONS ASP ANSWERS Potts Disease. What la Pott' disease' Is It cur able? (J. P.) Answer Tuberculosis of spine. If tsken In time It Is curable by (1) absolute physiological rest applica tion or cast, splint or brace to spine: (3) sunbathing and open air treat ment in hospital or sanatorium much Ilka tha standard treatment of pul monary tuberculosis; (3) In some ad vanced or neglected case, surgical treatment. Spinal tuberculosis Is common cause of hunchback. Vitamin D for sinus Trouble. Recently you recommended th use of vitamin D In the nose for chronic sinus trouble and recurring attacks of rhinitis or hay-fever-llke symp toms? (Mrs. p. j.) Answer Yes, two or three drops of a gland oily solution of vitamin D In asch nostril two or three times a day gives s good deal of relief In many such esses. Goitre and Fear. Doe faar cause goitre or goitre fear? (C. D.) Answer I should say fear may cause goitre, snd exophthalmic goitre may give patient expression of fesr. (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dllle Co.) there 1 about organisation a'ther an organisation of tha workers or -.n organization of employer of labor, th batter it wlU ba for all concerned. While thla flgh I being waged m fruit with tha fru.t of other growers will pile up at th receiving and of tha packing house. How circum vent th development of thl situa tion? Hara'a flow, by th workera that llv hr and know condition tup- ported by th employer of labor or ganizing a union that win ba bl to maintain It organization through out th whole year and will ba con tinued from year to year. Su.'b an organization of workers co -operating with employer of labor would 1 -bl to combat th unrest that will tend to develop. Should orchard worker Join tha union? It would make It easlt.r to maintain a permanent union organ zatlon If workera who have steady employment In tha orchard belonged to tha union. It 1 my belief that tha lea Mcrecy sooner or later wa mutt Warn that organization of labor Into unions is tha concern of the employer of la bor a much aa tha affairs of tha workers and that organization of em ployer of labor and organization! of workera must b primarily for tha purpose of co-operstlon to tha end that there will ba full time uninter rupted operation of Industry When tha political significance of union organization finally takes form in this country It will ba much eas ier to maintain a permanent union organization in Industries which only operate part of the year. For the present a permanent union or ganization In auch Industrial can only be maintained if encouraged and giv en tha moral aupport of tbo opera tora of such industries. J. O. BARNES. Medford, June ISth. must ba two aides to tha story. Ona, of courts, I th side of tha CIO, which la undertaking to organize tha steal Induitry. Th other I tha side of the men who sra atlcktng by thalr Jobs st no Uttls risk. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from th fUe of the Mall Trlbnn 10 and 10 yean ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 1, 1927. (It was Thursday.) Col. Lindbergh file to Washington from New York snd bsck. In evening clothes. Hero Is presented with scroll of editorial. "Lindbergh Piles Alone: Ed Not: Person! wishing to communicate with Dr. Hradj should aand letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. o.. S6S. El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. O.Mclntyre NIW YORK, June 19. Constsnoe Collier hss for her chirm, biting wit and often outrageoua upsetting of the conventions become the Mrs. Pat Campbell on this aide of the At lantic. Any tea party that can antiea her to the ringside la made. It will likely wind up with a whoop. Like Mrs. Camp ball, too, she goes nowhere without soma fantastle looking dog. Somatl mas a Pake, other tlmea a Sealyham or maybe a maatiff. I believe It waa Not) Coward who aald of cn of her newest eanlnea that It smelt Ilka a drain. Miss Collier, English born, has di vided her tlma between New York and London and la equally well known ha Uked e a. m. as a rising hour he was In constant fidget. He Uked to read newspapers and morning mall walking up and down. If he had to sit In a chair he was In a perpetual squirm, tearing up bit of papers or ruffing back his hslr snd crossing snd ra-croMlng his legs. His furious chewing of gum wss another Indica tion of the strange restlessness, his Jaws often In constant motion from the time he got up untU he retired. He could think best In action and that was why he always thouoht hi. better monologues were those that he delivered while twirling the lariat. After his first slrplane flight he told me tnat forever afterward rldlna on something aa alow as an express train waa aosoiute torture. The most consistent newspaperman anuDoer continues to be the actress, Katharine Hepburn Comment on the Dai s News Stat brings surprise In trial of Hugh DeAutremont, when aged miner Identifies him as man who held gun on him on Elliott creek a short time after tha Siskiyou tunnel murders. Roy Pruitt returns from trip to Oklshoma. New ulna holes to be opened at golf club June 39. Orasshoppen threaten Klsmath county crops. to ruin Mad Bull still leading In Grants Pass-prlsco marathon race. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June IS. 1917. (It waa Sunday.) Miss Leah Walther returns from the University ot Washington for the summer vacation. Mrs. w. P. Btddla was hostess to th Tuesday Bridge club Friday. Mra. Reginald Psrsons and children of Seattle. Wash., arriv to apend th aummer at Hlllcrest. School election to be held next Monday. Teams named for Red Cross drive. By FRANK JENKINS T'HE CIO strike st tha independent steel plants In th Middle Wast Is being dramatized skilfully as a struggle of downtrodden workers against their grssplng and heartless employers, and If your reading of tha developments from day to day Is sketchy snd careless you sra almost certsln to get that Impression. But If you read mora THOUGHT FULLY you will ba forced to the con clusion that there are TWO SIDES tc the story. ervHERB li tha undenlsble fact, for example, that soma thousands ot men sre STILL WORKING In the mills. In an effort to feed these men and keep them reasonably comfortable. In silt of the siege lines drawn around tha plant, tha employers hava resort ed to varloua devtcee Including air planes, soma of which have been ahot down by tha besieging strikers. On one occasion s train of Pullman cars wa run Into ona of tha plante to house tha beleaguered workera. Most of the fighting hss resulted Itom the effort ot tha CIO strikers to starve out these men who sre sticking by their Jobs. a compromla missionary on th court pltn la th : mate. Ba to laat reported to hava withdrawn to his well-guarded study in th RFC. His only recent appearance at tha hill waa at th gathering In honor of departing Vice-President Gamer, tha day before Garner left. A sympa thetic friend remarked that Corcoran and hi twin, Cohen, seem to ba getting tha boot with systematic regularity here lately. Corcoran re plied: "Hava you ever seen on of the revolving sho wheel! In a aho manufacturing plant? I feel Ilk 1 hv had ona of thoaa right behind me for six months." Another legislative missionary of tha White House hss veered to other pursuit lately. Chsrl. Wet, who fixed everything leglslatlv up to. but not Including, th court pack ing bill, haa been attending cabinet meetings ss Interior secretsry. He ha been replacing Mr. Ickes. who ap peara to be somewhat mora seriously 111 than has been snnounced. Whit there Is no danger In his condition, he Is likely to be out for a long time. With Gamer gone. Corcoran In re tirement and West out. Mr. Roose velt now hss no legislstlve liaison men. This fsct does not forecast early conclusion of the ilow-down strike, or even a desire to conclude It. LAWN MOWERS sharpened wa sail snd del Slrru Bro. Tel 361 33 N fit. SURE TO LICK RISING (Conttnueo Horn page Ona.) seem to be Just the same as In the beginning. The court bill Is likely to oa penaing when the senate sd- journs. her Irritation when she was badlv Pilloried In her first stage perform ancs a terrific flop. She was young, tender and very sensitive, and has never forgiven any branch of the press, no matter In what part of the country. Although her original tor mentora were dramatic critics snd' not reporters, she cannot b mollified, snd rsrely falls to slam doors In their face whenever bealeged. Manv on both aides, but It Is America, many ""-"""" inauigeo such tantrums npHESE workers who sre staying on the Job must feel that a principle or considerable Importance Is at It began with ' stake. Otherwise, they would not submit to the discomfort! and the risks thst are Involved. STATE G.A.R. OPENS MEET AT ALBANY ALBANY. Jun 16 VPV tVltviit'! of flvt organ ir Uon AffCltttd with th OAR. optnM thfir mmwl oon vrntion hfre tCKlny. Pro i rum high light tneludt n ad drwi bffor Joint mmtmi of til txYllra WfttntMatlay bj Dr. D V Pol tng, fltM lYprrMntAtive of th tc board of hihr tduoatton. ni thr pmtenUtlon Thurtday of Me marl..: briK-h. rias and picture. PftrtlclpAtitigj croupa tr? the Wom en ft Rflif rorpn. lt.tfhtr of Un on Vr.rii. Indira of th th tl. R . and th on of th O. A K , und 1U aiullturj. WASHINGTON. June i (f, 4ntor rirdtrlck etetwtr Mid today th Bvrna amendment, vhii-h would Kuir local contribution Jt 40 per of nt toward th cot of WPA project would not tndancer th Wolf creek think aho prefer. Largo of Uturo, h U at flrat meeting, thy. ahrlnk- Ing. but If aho take to you and turn on hr charm, you art hr Alave from then on I Many think her autobiography A fw year ago la on of tha moat re vealing written by a performer. In New York h make the Algonquin her dam, but at any moment la likely to go flying off to Hollywood, where flhe la In frequent demand for her character cameo. The new type of aatlny night club and anack bar ao r tort fled by the Lou la aobol and Cd Sullivan hare proved acceptable aprlng-boarda from which society oareer girt may uk off In their ambition to aot. Among the lucceMful an Sv Symington. Peggy Lynch, Adelald Moffett, Julie Qtlleaple and sereral others whose names escape me. It might em that moet of them were depending on a Pour Hundred background to put them over, but I hav seen nearly all and there' not on who could not hold th pot with hr own ability. Iatr longed for the reportorlal salvo. may even happen to Mtas Hep burn. Uf is often Ilk that. Memory: Grandpa wearing ahoea on the wrong feet now and then to keep them atralght. Etude: Now and then something oomes over moat of ui. When it cornea over me I pop Into a flortat ahop nnd come out adorned with a bright lapel flower. I had one of my spells thla morning and aa I emerged a roman tic aah-cart driver with spring In his heart and a discarded nosey tucked behind hi ear. called out with a grin: "You and me. buddy." (Copyright. IB37. McNaught Syndicate. Inc.) 1 believe torn ot the most luting impression I hav of crack enter tainment value hvae come out of th flossy cafes. They are flushing out more real talent than the stage and movies, and had vaudvlll displayed th same acumen in new finds It would not be where It Is today In the aAh-an. I think especial I of the mimic, Shtel Rarrett, the amazing blind pianist. Alei Templeton. the ventriloquist. Edgar Bergrn. Fray and praggiottl the versatile twin plsnUts, rddie Oarr. the impersonator, and of course. Ruby K"lr. Oeorge Raft. Rtng Crosby, and probably JW other md Wilson river highway project i: J Btm CRm om th. nlfJht dopted. I moquea. The proposed amendment to the relief bill would apply only to prol Whenever I e th term "bound- tect started during October or there- lew energy as I dtd a moment go itfter, the senator said. t I think of Will Rogers. His wife Steiwer predicted thst tt 1430 000 Betty once toW m she had never i.ned for state .apttol Imorovemem known him to appesr fatigued or to Orrtfon would be made available admit he was tired. Item the mo Communications WHAT Is this principle? Well, at this dlttsnos It Is hsrd to isy. for wa are too far away to ba SURE of the fact. But It Is fairly plsln thst whst CIO la aiming at 1 th closed ahop, with all workers be longing to CIO snd with th employ er deducting due from th workers' paychecks. (This Is known as th check-off system.) It amounta to a labor monopoly. That 1 to aay, all workori must be long to CIO, and pay CIO duea. If they ara to get Jobs. Oppose Secrecy In Local l.;ibor l the Editor: As s pear grower I am vitally in terested In tha uninterrupted oper ation of tha fruit packing plants dur ing the racking season. This season at the peak of packing activity there will develop among workera more than an ordinary amount of unrest because of agita tion for labor organization now ds Ing carried on throughout tha coun try. The ttae will be set for a walkout at-d the formation of a "carpet Ds$" union organization. That Is a union organization that will tout enly a lew weeks and then pas out of the pic ture for tha reat of th year. But capabi of caustrqt an Interruption n packing house operations Not only are there alwarh self ap. pointed agitators that have I. title or no understanding of tha labor m--v. ment but 'here are. aa well, alvays representative of employers eaKHi atlens ready to come In from thi outside to advcvAt the ortani7atijn vVUsnf comm'.ttee In rmr ,'orm or othr t.i combat tha uureit I INIONS are all right, and the right of workera to belong to them WHEN THEY WANT TO mult be pro tected at all cost. But If workers sra to REMAIN FREE, membership In vnlons must ba VOLUNTARY. II ii. en can ba forced Into unions against their will, their Ubertte will have been seriously InUrfarad with. It must be realisation of thla fact. oi something Ilka It, that I keeping these men st work In the steel plants. Otherwise, they would not accept tha risks and tha discomfort that ara involved. -pAKINQ all the fsct Into consider ation. It It appsrent thit there Messrs. Corcoran and Cohen, the unofficial attorneys general, are due for a senatorial thrashing, and not In the woodshed. Legislators have been trying to get something worth using against those two renowi for three yeara or more but Mr. R.'i urchins have always been too smart. They have never even admitted the authorship of any of the dozen or more major re form measures which they have writ ten. Mr. Cohen maintains himself aa a ghoat-llks figure within tha safe conflnea of the PW. Mr. Corco. ran la the congressional wire-puller. He got hold of a hot wire only once. In dealing with that Maine cngrees msn, but thst developed into a ques Hon of who said what and nothing ever came of It. It la said neither ghoat has aver put anything in writing except over the signature of someone else. However. Mr. Corcorsn must have become ' over-conf ldent lately, aa two senators say they are getting ready to produce two letters from him which may, at last, officially de fine his sctlvitles. These, they ssy. will be used In the senste debste on the court progrsm the first time anyone mentions Mr. Corcorans name. Then there Is also th mstter of s llttl personal Inside debste be tween Corcorsn and Senator Mlnton of Indiana a coupl of weeks ago. Senators In esrshot thought they hesrd Mlnton threaten to vote against the court program If Corco ran did not let up on him, or some thing somewhat Ur lar. These developments hav deitroyed the effectiveness of Mr. Corcorsn aal Busine men are be coming more exacting in truck purchases because operating costs in all de partments of business art rapidly mounting. To pre measure a truck's operat ing expenses is now good judgment and often avoids unnecessary losses. 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