MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY. JUNE 21. 1937. maaamsasasssss UNE "XtatTtM l Boathere) Oreaea dl Ike Mall Trlbeae." Deu ftieet (atsrdar. Published br HEDfOKD PIHIINO CO. iii?- n. nr at. paeae ti ROBERT W.RUHL, editor. ERNEST B. OIL8TRAP, UanJr. As Independent Newspaper. Catered aa Meond-cliM matter at Med far. Oregon, coder Aet of Mares a. UTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATE! Hall Io Advanoel BallJ, oae rear IJ.JJ Dallv. all months Dally, one month .10 r Carrier. In Ad ranee Medford, Ann. . land Jacksonville. Central Point, phoenls. Talent, Oold Hill aad as hlthwara. Ballr. one rear Dallr, ela montho l- Dallr. one month eo All terma. eaah In advance. Official Paper of lb CIU of Hertford Official Psper of Jackson Coast MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Reeelvtns- roll Usee Wire Service. TOO Aeeoclated Preaa la eaoluelvelv en titled to the uae for publication of all aewe dispatches credited to It or eteer wleo eredlted to thle paper, and alee to tse local newo published herein. - All rlsbta for publlcatloo of epeelal dispatches herein are aleo reserved. MEMBER OP UNITED PRES1 MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATIONS Advertlalng Repreeentatlvee Offices In New fork. Cntcofo, Detroit. . r,i..luiL f,aa Aneeles. S a a 1 1 1 0. p rtland. St. Louie. Atlanta. Vanooover. aJ5 Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry, The Congressional proposal pro viding, thst communities bear 96 par mt of ths cost of relief projects, Is quits spt to shake the blithe be lief of taxpayers In a Democratic State Clsus, heretofore gaily engaged In the distribution of federal money with No. 0 scoop shovel, and a rod wheelbarrow. It will convince - ettlssns they are closely related to the pay-back, s painful procedure generally regarded aa distant if at all. It bests sll how removal of ths rubber band from ths personal bank rolls breeds economy with public dough. see Bilbao, the "Pittsburgh of Spain" tit been captured by Spanish reb els. Johnstown, the BUbso of Penn sylvania, Is still In the htnds of steel striken and National Quanta. e JOURNALISTIC COMP.-BACR (Southwestern Oregon News) j, "Without further sdo, this of flelsl correspondent of rsln snd i knst Infested Orendsll of mud rosd fame returns to ths col umns of this newspaper for an other spell of writing newa all about Greenacre under the head ing of Delmar." see It la beginning to look like June would eoms snd go, without hlbltlng few. If any, of the rare dsys for which It is famed In poem, a e e It Is now alleged that a cltlnen charged with Income tsg dodging. dodgsd ss much ss 12,000,000, accord ing to treasury Investigation. Belit tling no whit the legal sllcknees of ths dodger. It Is difficult to under 1 stsnd how thst much money ever missed him. see Political scribes of the state are describing school election campaigna ss "quiet." a favorite word of so ciety editors, In referring to a wed ding. e e "Two per cent Inspiration snd OT per cent pereplratlon will make the wheels go round. Let's take our coats ff snd sweat awe-1 Ilka h 1 for Illinois Vslley That's ths way to get something accompllahed." (Illlnoia Valley Newa) Wherein, wiping the brow, Instead of elesrtng ths throat becomes ths high algn of civic en deavor. e o e Ths 1st National bank has been roomtnlsed, providing a wide open apses big enough for a country dsncs. A citizen can now entet to fill his fountain pen, with no dan ger of putting It back In another man's coat pocket. see Russian aviators In an attempted non-stop flight from Moacow to San Francisco landed at Vancouver, Wan., after s heroic flight across the Arc tie wsstea, and the Canadian wllda. Their Intrepidity la comparable only to ths (100-odd Medfordlten who bat tled their way to the polls laat Fri day. o TB r.NRAPTlRr.n REPORTER.. "If they hadn't made a aound they were still worthwhile. Only girls whose forebears knew the fjorda snd breesee of Scandinavia could have cheeks so softly fluctuating wltn pink and while. At their Interpreta tion of s Swedish wedding I wanted to get married In Swediah once a month: wanted to die In Swediah. too, when they sang "In Heaven Above." the acarlet-clad soloist s filming spirit carrying ma straight Into ths arms of comforting divinity. Through them we sslled ths seven seas with Vtklnga, and ths ship wss a conquering thing which defied winds snd waves and roaring temp eat. The listeners unconsciously etralghtmvo themselves In their seats and for ths time being the name of every one of them ended In frown Baker queen BAKER, June 31. (API Miss Jsnes rernald, granddaughters of Walter rernald. pioneer miner and banker, was crowned queen of the Baker mining Jubilee laat week-end rot Oreater Batiafaouon aVuy HOLDS at HO RSI HOSIERY at Bthelwyn B. Hoftmans'a. sV ok B. Oreaa taatpa. Medfo: Stalin Won 't Like It 'HE flight of tint Soviet pln, over the top of the world, to Vancouver, WftibingtoB, w t great achievement. But over in Moscow official circles, wc fear, there will be great disappointment. For the objective of the flight was not attained. The fliers reaehed the United Statei, but they didn't reach their destina tion, San Franciaco. Thia wag a break for the Portland newspapers., juat acrdaa the river, and they made the moat of it. But it waa hard luck for the three Russian airmen. In the secret achives of Soviet aviation the exploit we FOR when Brother Stalin orders any of his air force to do a thine thev are aunnoaerl to T)0 it. If anvthinff like noor visibility intervenes, they are If press reports are correct, the engine, nor the men. The plane got as far south as Eugene and then because of fog and rain turned back. Under the circumstances, discretion may have been the better part of valor, but if our information is correct, that aphorism baa no place in the Soviet note book, especially in the air service. Russia ia proud of its air unquestionably has the largest and one of the best. It ia no secret, that this North Pole exploit, was the Soviet government's way of telling the world about it. rIERE were aeientific and meteorological elements involved, of course. But essentially thia expedition, was the brain child of the propaganda department and the foreign office. Had the Russian airmen, disregarded discretion, made American tradition and reach their objective or bust well they might have busted, but then again they might not. And if they had, they would have been heroes, but dead ones, and if they had not they would have teen heroes and very much alive, with their Soviet acroll of fame. IT was just a tough break, and we fear, from the Soviet stand- point will be recorded also as an inexcusable error in judg ment. For in Russia aa in most other countries but particularly in Russia at the present time, nothing succeeds like success. And nothing ia aa fatal as failure, particularly when it is advertised, throughout the world, and the Soviet government has to take it." We don't mean the rest of standing aerial achievement aa three skillful and courageoua airmen, anything but the most enthusiastic acclaim and the greatest credit. DUT when the excitement of the dramatic exploit passes, and the novelty of the north pole tangle is forgotten, the final reckoning, will be added up in Moscow, and we don't believe there will be any medals or bouquets pinned to the official verdict. In such matters sympathy and sentiment, don't count. What Brother Stalin wants, and all he cares about, are results And he won't reliah.. results which broadcast over the world (again assuming the press reports are correct) that three crack members of his air aervice, after negotiating the north pole, and being within 500 miles of their objective, turned tail before an Oregon land fog, instead of successfully fighting it out. Garner Loses Ardor For Probe Of Tax Collector By H. H. Raiikage Copyright, 1037, by the North Amer ican Newapsper Alliance. Inc. WASHINGTON, Juns Sle-Hlstory la quite an old lady and often repeats hersslf, but shs manages to put on a highly novel quirk Into some of ths tales shs tosses out ss news. As tai evaalon Investigations hunt the headlines, some tss collectors shiver a little. Because and here history winks ismlnlscently there Is certain appre hension lest the public lose confi dence in the treasury Itself as sn efficient tag collector. A sentiment htld by no less a person than John Nance Oarner once. 'I just want the house to under stand this situation (ths collection of taxes snd refunds), and eapeclelly my Republlcsn brethren, as to how much dependence can bo placed upon itatemente of the treasury depart ment, based upon any statistics It Hives . . give me sn opportunity to tnvestlgats the treasury department. and I will do It." That was Mr. Oarner sprsking; date: December 16, 1(30. The Investigation that the then member of the house of representa tives waa trying to promote wu aimed it treasury methods, primarily, In permitting the evader to evade. He waa unsuccessful. Two yean later, the picture changed. It la now July, 1033. Representa tive Garner has become Speaker Oar ner. but, more than that, vlct-preal denttaJ candidate. "I still have the lame opinion about the necessity of an Investiga tion." he aald. But he did not want to carry It out and have the people of the country lose confidence In the tteaeury, those were the disturbed days before the bsnk holiday. In Uvalde, Mr. Oarner reada ths news of the hearings, perhsps he wonders. Old Lady History chuckles a, the new turn she Ass given an ancient tsls. The La Follette civil liberties com mittee Is making history. Police officials and others who took pert In the Memorial Day riot In Chicago will face themselvee on th -vitneaa stand, roe the flrat time, a nr.ortng picture nim will testify at a ccngreaeional hearing. It has also been used to Identify the policemen and others who are to be called to Washington to appear before the committee. When the film la shown officially before the committee, an Important btesk, it is asserted. ul be filled by fear, will be written down a flop. expected to riae above it. there was nothing wrong with service, and with reason. It air force in the world today. decided in favor of valor and up their minds, to follow the names inscribed forever, on the the world will regard this out a failure; or accord to these the amateur ahots of a minister who bad his camera trained on the riot scene. The Interruption In the sequence occurred when the newareel men switched from a long "shot" to a close-up of a atrlker Juat before the firing began. It Is said that the min isters film will reveal the fatal "first shot." The cameraman who took the pic tures In Chicago may go down In hla tory. In any case, hla handiwork will. This mechanical wltnesa that can't be cross-questioned will stick to Its story aa long as celluloid lssts. even then can be recreated and called back to the atand Indefinitely, and become a nart of the archlvea of the United Statea. As testimony before a com mittee, It Is a part of the official records of the senate. Qradtially. all records are being transferred to the flre-thlef-snd-bomb-proof vaults of ths Archlvea building. The sensts haa no sate place to store that Inflammable and Inflam matory negative. The Archlvea build inr hsa. In fact. It has the most up-to-dste vaults In the world for atorlns film In heat and damp-realstlng con tainer. The official reason for the wlth urawal of the film from publlo pre sentation In the theaters Is that, like other "horror" scenes, It Isn't "good theater." . As the tax evaders' Investigation rulla on, great shovels tear Into the earth where the museum will soon rlss which Is to hold the collection of priceless masterpieces donated by An drew Mellon to the American people At the same time, behind the dul' ,-rd facade of an ancient three-story- and-basement house on LaFayette Square, acroas from the White House. Ltammera are ringing. Here Mr. Mel lon will have an office. Close by la the tall Brooklnga Insti tution, of late severe critic of certain New Deal activities. Around the cor ner, where once the wide brsnehes o an historic elm once shaded the home of Daniel Webster, rlsea the Imposing ( Chamber of Commerce of the United , States. Gradually, thia tree-filled square, upon which Dolly Madison , oios looked from her own windows: ilhe house still stands). Is being de- mided of us historic isndmarka. But unless architects order a mod- e.-n front. Mr. Mellc-n's Washington headquartera will not change the pro- file of what Is left of a treasured ' and reminiscent akyllne. Be Correctly heorseted in AN ART181 MODEL by Ethel wyn B, Hoffmann, Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, WU1 be answered by Dr. Brady If stamped self- addressed envelops Is enclosed. Letters Owing to ths large number of letters No reply can ba mads to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 2SS El Cam! no, Beverly, Calif. ODD HOUSE IN NEBULOUS STAGE Soma weeks ago one of our falth fut readers sent the following in quiry without date: "I have taken down curtains, and havs put maps on the wall. Can you make some fur ther suggestions for Odd House? (Mrs. W. J. W.) From the con text I Infer Mrs. W. alludes to the house men tloned In this column recently. the sort of house the nut In charge of this column would build If he could live his own way. There would be no purely decor ative monkeyshtnes on the walls of Odd House, colored maps of all the world, certainly, or pslntlngs or photographic representations of act ual scenes or subjects the master might like but never a vague pic torial expression of nothing at all. For all such "art" s silent Bronx exhalation. I said Odd House Is de signed so the master may live nls own way. Odd House hss no dining ro?m. Whether the nut dines alone or .las forty guests st dinner, the main room will not be otherwise engaged during dinner, so why not use It. Seems to me It Is always a bit un gracious to shoo everybody out of the living room into a cubbyhole or stall for the sole purpose of feed ing. Especially so when the herd Is permitted to take cocktails, hors d'oeuvres, cigarettes or plug tobacco right there In the living room where they are comfortable. . Curtains? Mrs. w. made the right beginning. Certainly no curtains over windows. Why put windows In any house If you Intend to cover them with curtain shades, awnings, bllnrta? Maps on the walls, with a varnish or other Impervious surface, could te cleaned when necessary by washing. My main objection to wall paper or other conventional hangings Is the weariness any such mschlne-made decorations causes. Have you eer endured hours or days of convales cence In a room where you could only wander In a daze amidst the nine thousand four hundred sixty forget-me-nots on the walla? Surelv QO-Mclniyre NEW YORK, June 31. In the manner of Arnold Bennett's Jour nal: An English friend writes me seeing Col, Lind bergh w a 1 k 1 ng slowly, head down, through a forest near hie countryside home "a forlorn figure of I n a r tlculate grief." Its his belief the crush ing tragedy has made the Llnd berghs p e r m a- nent exiles. M. and I drove about the great Pocantlco Hills, home or the elder Rockefeller, the other sundown. Death somehow always In tensities tne beauty of such eatstes. There was an odd calm and every bluff and pinnacle seemed starkly nd affectionately silhouetted agalnat the lemon sky. Perhaps It was the visual enchsnt- ment as we stopped st one peak to gaze down upon the Hudson ruffed Into a silvery glisten but the birds- evening songs seemed especially clear and lyrical. As though to carol a hope and a message all waa well. g"i musing anyway. Because of motor difficulty stopped beyond T--rytown nesr the trailer home of a gypsy caravsn. Two swarthy crones with rings In their ears, adder eyee and Incredibly filthy, slouched over with a greasy pack of cards. Ws shook our hesds. waved them away and they curaed tia with a magnificence Mark Twain would have loved. How much we miss of little emo tional rapturea by clinging to the steel and asphalt of the city. I was telling V. V. McNutt that no musical event I ever heard and that goes for the several highly bespoken sym phonic offerings have the skyey wallop of the robins' choir as night graya Into the apiendor of a morn ing pink. And where may one enjoy the exquisite melancholy that goes with the croak of pond frogs some place far hark In the Ohio hills? Outalde of sporting a monocle to the manner born, no aartorlal doo dad excltea my ambition like wear ing a white satin lined Inverness, with one corner of the cape flung i over the shoulder Just so! The only Inverness I ever saw worn by Amerl- I cans were on Phil Slmma when he waa a dramatic critic in Cincinnati ; and Dudley Field Malone arriving nobly st Clro's In Farle one night j I'm not the Inverness tvpe. Few are j The only acceptable Inverness csndi- datea that pope Into mind at the moment are Tonv Riddle. Prince An- drew oi urcece ana nen nil rtngin. . . . ., , ' m,.. , .h no . ,,.. .,h , d N gsdge,. look so i.untv as an etertiv knotted muff- ,,r And lnfv ,., be worn every sea- ,on (,( lr,e v,,r hr a ele.-llon ot light, medium and he'svy materials vvilllam Farersham waa reallv the first mufflerlst. Lea'.-.e Howard fling ! coast j a mean muffler, so do Warren Wil- j llsm snd Harry Bannister. Rut the; 40 Adrsnce styles for rail rrice-1 ' most accomplished of all is the Bnt-jat Spring prices until July a. Ous j lth comedian Seymour Hicks. He I the Tilior, 133 Noith Central. j Brady, M. D. should be brief and written In ink received only s few can be answered - an Imaginative cruise In the Med. Iterranean or In the Oolf of Cali fornia or down the Pacific coast of Mexico and Central America would be much better diversion for an In valid windows unobstructed by ugly gadget whose main purpose Is to conceal dirt, crudity or tawdrlness. sre a main feature of Odd House. If the view from the window or the view Into the house through the window Is not what one wishes, wny have a window there at all? Better, for the purpose of admltlng light and air, .to put windows In or nesr the roof. Further features of Odd House will be described from time to time. Readers are invited to offer suggea tlons remembering that health Is the main consideration In equipping the place. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS flipothyroldlsm and Vitamin D You said vitamin D lncresaea the metabolic rate In cases of slow met abolism due to hypothyroidism. Woulc It be contra-Indicated In hyp erthyroidism, where metabolism is above the normal? (C. E. 8.) Answer Not necessarily. It speeds up a subnormal metabolism toward the normal, but not above normal. Preservation of Food Is food cooked today and kept In the refrigerator for 34 houra before It Is eaten, wholesome and health ful to eat? (Mrs. I. H.) Answer Yes, If the temperature In the refrigerator Is below 50 de grees. Preschool Child Niece sged three years, hss not been vaccinated yet. We hesitate to have her vaccinated because she is so active and restless, we fesr sue may scratch and Infect the wound. (Mrs. E. A. M.) Answer Better have her vaccin ated against smallpox lmmedlstcly, and its soon ss that Is over with, have her Immunized against diph theria, aurely before she reaches school age. Every baby should be vaccinated against smallpox by the age of one year, and Immunized against diphtheria by the age of two or three years at latest. (Copyright 1937, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D 269. El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. gives It pomp, panache and punch. This about a muffler: Take the sor rlest Bowery bum. shave him. cut his hslr and swath his neck In a de cent muffler and he will appear as tonishingly duded up. I sawa the ex periment tried once by Eugene Wal ter, the playwright, In search for a bit of contraatlng realism In a drama. Two de luxe cat shops, mirrored ana cnromiumed to a glitter, were opened and shuttered within month recently. Cats are difficult to handle In the confines of a small shop. They need big yards for roam ing and high fences for cat walks, otherwise they sicken and die. The most successful cat dealers are those who rear cata for sheer love of It in private homes In the suburbs. On his way to California severs! weeks ago Will H. Hays had his son. Bill, who had Just been graduated from Wabash, meet him In Chicago for a dinner and theater celebration together. Next morning, as they were walking Michigan avenue, the elder Hays stopped before a new roadster drawing up at the curb. He noticed that the Initials on the door were the aame aa his aon's W. H. H., Jr By that time. The Great Light had broken over the boy. He realized It waa a "plant," hla father's way of surprising him with a graduation gift. Every young man should have one of these surprises In his life. It Is difficult to recsll them in later yeara without a throat twitch. Mine waa on a lesser scsle a muckle dun pony hitched to the rack In front of my father'a hotel on a birthday morning. No matter If, spurred be yond a slow walk, the pinto suffer ed from what la known In veterina rian vernacular aa "the heaves" a breathing malady auggeatlng aour notes from a tuba It was one of the most memorable eventa of life. A real pony I (Copyright, 1937. McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) STALIN CABLES Tl MOSCOW. June 31 . (Pi Josef Stalin led high Soviet officials today In cabling congratulations to the three Russian transpoiar fliers at Vancouver, Wash. The cable from the secretary-gen- of 'he communist party read "Congratulate you warmly on your brilliant victory. Your successful achievement of the heroic non-stop flight from Moscow over the North pole to the United States excltea the admiration and lore of the tollers of the whole Soviet union. "we are proud of the courageous, bold goti,t aviators who lenored all obstacles to reach their goal. We em- Iru ,n(1 jhaje your hands Weather Northern California: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday: not so a-arm In interior Tuesday; moderate chaieaMe wind e-ff coast. Oregon: Showers tonight and i Tuesey. little change in tempera- j ture: moderate southerlv wind off i Comment on the Day 's News By FRANK JENKINS IT has been raining In southern Oregon as you may have heard if jou have been listening to people talk. In spits of the fact that It Is well past mid-June, It hss been rain ing for better than a week snd s half. AT first, we were plessed. We gathered In little groups on the street and told each other with contented smiles how swell this un usual and unexpected rainy spell Is how It Is putting dollars In the pock ets of the foothill farmers snd the dry-lend farmers and the stook men, snd how It Is filling up the Irrigation reservoirs to the overflowing point etc. (We're sll Interested In the prob lems of tha foothill farmers snd the dry-land farmers and the stock men. ;ou know, because we're all expecting to sell them something this summer snd fall If they're flush about that time. There's nothing like a little good old selfishness to make people truly sympsthetlc.) TJOR the flrat few days (while the bulk of the benefits were being conferred on us) we were tickled pink. We paddled around In the ralr and actually liked It. Then, for a few claya more, we PRETENDED to like It After that, human nature asserted .tself and we began to crab. Nobody likes to feel his new straw hat wilting around his esrs and spilling wster down the back of his neck, and all the anticipated benefits Imaginable csn't MAKE him like It. So, by the end of the first ten dsys we scanned the skies anxiously each morning for signs of a let-up, and when the signs looked unpromising (as they usually did) we went out on the back porch and kicked the cat THE rain, of course, has been doing us s LOT more good than harm, snd st this time of the year and with the season's precipitation total what it was a couple of weeks ago the Cownpour haa been little short of msnna from heaven. But human beings are Just human beings, and nothing much can change 'hem. (The New eDal reformers to the contrsry, notwithstanding.) They like what they like when they like It, and they don't like what they don't like. And VERY FEW human beings like ten dsys of pouring rsln. BUT, really. It has been unusual. If you want to know Juat how unusual It haa been, consider these figures: On Tuesdsy night, it rslned 1.18 inches at Orovllle. In the Redding area, during the 36 hours ending on Wednesday morning, the rainfall to taled 3.91 Inchea. At Red Bluff, the precipitation for the 34 hours ending on Wednesday morning was 130 ll.ches. At Orland, it was 1.08 Inches When It reins like thst In the latter half of June In the Sacramen to valley. It s SOMETHING. What It Is nobody knows exactly, but It looks u If old Jupe's rsln barrel might ,-iave aprung a leak. A NYWAY, It haa been good for us ' When the returns are all In next fall, we'll look back to these June iod-busters snd tell ourselves chestlly that If It hadn't been for them we wouldn't have had anything like as gcod a year. FEDERAL SCHOOL HELP SEEN AS NEED DUE TO SHIFT IN POPULATION CHICAGO. UP Stady migration from farm to city particularly from poorfr farming area, ts making fed eral support for education necessary, according to Prof. Newton Edwards of th University of Chicago. Edwards said the need waa most acute In that 35 percent of the popu lation which had moved from home states. This group constitutes more than 35.0OO.0O0 persons. 3.000,000 of whom tre NeRroes. he said. There has been a heavy movement from the under-privileged areas of the south to the metropolises of the north, he .said. Many of these, he aald. are chil dren and youth tinder age. and their education in the towns and cities to which they have moved U a vlttl problem. "It Is of no alight significance." Edwards said, "that the youth of the nation who are being provided the moat meager educational opportun ities are the ones who. In Urge num bers, will find It necessary to seen occupational opportunity outside the community In which they were born. "Sound social policy he said, "re quires an extension of educational opportunity for a large part of the rural youth of the nation. "What is needed t a re-orientation of rural education to meet the edu cation 1 need s of bot h t hose who live in the town and cities and of those who will remain In the coun try. The successful development of such a program will require literal financial uppoct from the federal BOMB SHELTERS N TOKYO PLANS TOKTO (UP) A movement to re quire inclusion of underground bomb-proof shelters in business building of the future has been started here. The program was begun with display of subterranean safety rooms showing how such shelters could be utilised In cases of enemy air raids. The metropolitan police board ia studying legislation that would re quire adequate bomb-proof quarters in every new school or office build ing constructed in Tokyo. It has not been decided, however, whether such a law may be enacted. Working quietly, an air raid de fense laboratory under police aus pices has been active for three years in co-relating various methods ot defense against air attacks. Annual air maneuvers, in which cities of Japan are plunged Into darkness while rescue workers and the populace are trained In what to do against enemy raids from the sky, are a part of the program to make Japan "air conscious." Prom these maneuvers government officials have evolved a comprehen sive defense strategy. They do not care to discuss It In detail but from time to time emphasise to the pub llo one or another phase of It. These take the form of drills In eacap 1 n g from h 1 gh bul I dings by means of canvas chutes sloping to the street, of familiarity with gas masks and the designation of cer tain rallying points in each neigh borhood where citizens are supposed to congregate when bomba are drop ping. Considerable publicity Is being given to erection of a new building by the Dal-lchl lfe Insurance com pany which Includes a bomb-prool underground shelter capable of car ing for 60,000 perrons. Four underground levels would -e devoted to the alr-rild shelters. In addition to using the under ground chambers for refuge, they could be utilized aa dressing sta-: tlons, examination of gassed or wounded persons and for store rooms for food. Police specialists are pushing the air-defense thought by pamphlets and lectures In addition to the dis plays of models. Should It be decided to make bomb-proof shelters a re quired part of new construction, it would be done through amending the building laws. Japanese officials put particular stress on air-defense technique be cause cf Japan's geographic position close to the Asiatic mainland, which makes an air visitation easy under modern flying c',, tlons. RISE OF POOR 'CLASS -TO RULE OF NATIOI SEEN BY EDUCATOR CHICAGO (UP) America within the next few generations may be ruled entirely by persons coming from what are now the under-privileged classes, according to Dr. Newton Ed wards, University of Chicago professor of education. "Americans who have the highest occupational status and enjoy the richest cultural resources are falling to replace themselves from one gen eration to the other," he reported. "In contrast." he said, "the under privileged element In American life supply the chief source of population increase." A disproportionate percentage of t'.ie population. Dr. Edwards said, comes from among farmers on mar ginal and sub-marginal lands and from unskilled ' and semi-skilled la borers. Falling behind, he said, were busi ness and professional men and the skilled laboring classes. "We can only speculate, on the political and economical consequences of class differential In reproduction.' tlte educator said. "But it is certain that for some decade the future voters of this country will come !n disproportionate numbers from the under -privileged elements In Ameri can life." .Schools, he said, would have to take up the burden of spreading cul ture where homes had failed. In some manner, the school must mke good the deficit of home snd community," he concluded. "The future holds the answer, and the aiswers may be in part determined by what takes place In American schools." CAR LANDS IN TREE ' SALEM. June 31. P) State police said Sunday an automobile was found perched high In a tree along Rlck erell creek, abutting the Salem-Dallas highway. Investigation revealed the car had left the road, turned over and crashed Into the tree. Franklin L. snd Ray Kliever. broth ers who had occupied the car. were located in a Dallas hospital. They were en route to Salem when the ac cident occurred. Both men suffered broken collar-bones and other Injur ies. Police said the tree esved the mschine from a 30-foot plunge. Taft F!eta Dampened TAFT. June 31 i APi A heavy downpour of rain failed to nuencn the spirit of tse Taft readied roundup. The mijor events of 't.e week-end went ahead as scheduled, but under cover. Ruth R.iodes. Port lend, won the bathing beauty con test. LAWN MOWERS sharpened We sail and del. Sims Bros, Tel. asi, to N, FU. Flight vo Time Medford and Jackson Count; history from the files ot the Mail Tribune 10 and to rears sfo. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 21, 193? (It was Tuesday) Hugh DeAutremont found guilty ol murder with recommendation for life Imprisonment by Jury. Twin brothers returned here snd Sheriff Jennings outwits isrge crowd at De pot. Fugitives glsd to see parents. Jurors deliberate 1:30. Work on new city hall started. Diamond lake to be opened June 28. Letters to editor Insist Hufh. De Autremont, found guilty ot murder, is "rallrosded." Only 17 votes are east In school election. Howard Scheffel and N. M. Franklin are elected directors. Nineteen twenty-seven pear prices in California up 10 percent over mat year. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 21, 1917 (It waa Thursday) Soldiers pick fruit and pitch hay to relieve shortsge of farm labor In valley Mrs. Jerry Jerome leaves for short visit st Yreka. Porter J. Neff and Paul Jenney, leave on long hike down Rogue and will return July 1. American liner gun crew sinks submarine off English coast. Washington police arrest picketing suffragettes st the White House. Heavy fighting on Alsne front re pels Germsn sttack. (Conttnueo uom Page One.) that buys his milk. Along with the check, these days, goes a communi cation to the effect that regulating the creamery hours will sour the milk business. Actually, the creamery people say they don't want to defeat the bill. They Just want an exemption when it comes to regulating hours, for their own business, which, they say, can't be regulated. They believe they can prove It as sure aa cream curdles. Now that the frost is on the Julep, and the thermometer frisks ninety, the talk turna to presidential candi dates as a subject which requires no brain-effort at all. By way of a contribution, the result of a re cent poll taken by a middle western magazine on the opinion of Washing ton correspondent has been privately announced. According to the pollers, the majority of the correspondents (who were warned to pick their guess and not their wish) guessed the In cumbent. The heart-burn afflicting certain deserving diplomats when the presi dent recently tightened up on the rules against accepting foreign orders and decorations ha developed Into a few case of acute Indigestion. The unusual Italics In the Irksome executive order appear to make it a moot question whether the state department can accept any suca award at all. Formerly, they were deposited In escrow in the depart ment safe until the Intended recip ients left the service. Incidentally, the prohibitions are said to have been underlined by Counsellor R. Walton Moore. Postmsster General Farley, friend andor enemy or philatelists, hss csused sn uproar in the stamp col lecting world by bringing out the finest catalogue of United States stsmps ever printed. It Is the best because It blandly disregards the law which hitherto haa forbidden the printing of the Itkeneases of American stamps, on penslty of fine of not more than $5000, or of Imprisonment of not more than 15 years, or both. The collectors have been fighting to lift this ban for years. Now. right on the heels of Mr. Parley's catnlogue, which costs only 25 centa. comes a bill Introduced by Representative Summers of Texs, which would make reproduction of stamps (under "rigid restrictions) legal. Farmers Fear Flood In Labish Territory SILVERTON. June J1.(AP Heavy rains of the last several days have raised Pudding rtver between six and aeven feet above the prevloua level which was still above the sum mer normal. Farmers were fearful that the Lake Labtsh country would be flmded. which would cause a serious crop loss In the SUverton hills growers esti mate that three-fourths of the pres ent Itrewberrr crop hss bee,, lost. In higher altitudes there la hope of half e crop. Michigan Swept Jay Wind and Kam DETROIT. June 31. (API Wind, rain and lightning which swept ""uttirii. .wu cas.rrn Aiicmgnn Bun day nUrht left at least seven persona dead snd many thousands of dnliTS of property damase. Three persons drowned In Sejm.iv bay. off Llnwooa. Mich, when tbelr outboard motortviat capsized In a storm One man was killed by flying timbers from a demolished barn. Two men were killed by lightning and a fa:ien wire electrocuted an other man. I'M Will Tribune wast ada.