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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1937)
PAGE FOUR frrEDFORT) MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORTOOy. TVTIDN'ESDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1937. MEOFORDfikTRISUNK "Evvrroa is Snottim Orctae) Bcad lb Mall rrthoM." Dmttf ataeepf itarardaj. UUIintRn PRINTING CO. M-tf-ll N Pit 8L PkoM H ROBBRT W BUUU SMIlor RRNCfll a aiUSTRAK Manager. A ladepMSent Newspaper. BatraMl U MCUDil OlfcM matter tl M0 for. Oregon, sneer Aot of litre ft. Ill SUBSCRIPTION lUTBI By Hall In Ataaoei DaIIjt. ooo vu .) Dally, ots moot he nilw. nna month v GirMar. In lilnnai Uortford. Aeh Isa. Juktonvlll, 0 o t r a l Point. PbooBis, Tatast, ol HIU 4M DsJlr. one roar....... tv Dall. month Dally, on month Ail term a tab lo adveaoe. OMlciMi taoer ol tb Ut ol Uodrord Otr'-iMl Pnpor of iecfcsoa Uorurtj UJCMHfc.M Oil rH AHMOCIAIKU fttfcft ewtelvuis rnu kenaeo mn UtloS to the au for puDllosiloe of ell n AtmatehM arwItUI to It Of Other wlM 9 rod t tart to thlp pipor. an tlao Ui tho loeaJ owi paDiianaa ooroia. Ail right for pubiloatlon of apeoiai ditpatohaa harafn ara lao reaorvM. UBMBBB OP UN 1TB D PRESS UBMBBR OW AUDI1 BURBAO OF CIRCULATION! Advortlsioa RapraoantAttToa Offloea la New Tork. Phtoago, Dstrolt. Sao rranolaao, to nli, fl 1 1 I a, Portland, St Lrftuia. Atlanta, tingwi Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. In th Spanish civil war. tha "dead ara plied ten high In tha atreeta ol Blcante." proas reports reveal. Thin la. no competition in gruesomeness for China and Japan, who maintain a almllar horror over a 100-mile front. a Tha prediction a week ago, upon tha heels of a cool morning: "Wo had a short summer," was prema ture, tor summer has returned. In' ataad of ona long summer this region la now In for two short ones. a a a News from Europe says the Presl dtnt'e boy, John, Is bshavlng him as If. He Is throwing no more chanv pagn In n7 Mayor's face, or bis own t , The fried chicken season has start ad In the rural areas, and tho time has come to watch out for Portland politicians, making spssohee at Orange meetings. WHO CARKKf (Los Angeles Times) "Soma people possibly may be Interested, academically, In the extent of the hirsute adornment on the cheat of Robert Taylor, the film Adonis. But hi threat while In Paris that he will bare Bis thatched bjosom to publlo gaze upon his return to New Tork and thereby prove his mas culinity sounds like carrying the proof too far." a Orapee Again adorn the market placet. Back in the Prohibition era they flaunted ths sign: "Pine for Jelly." a The Democratic national commit' tea la In the market for a campaign slogan to take the place or the last one, towlt: "Happy Days Are Here Aft in." An npt and lively democratic aioe-an, in the light of events would be. "We Have Throwed the Good Fit" NRW FALL SHAPES FOR WOMEN DISPLAYED" (Chlco (Calif.) Enter prise) The medium loan are nil the rage. The early prediction of Thanksgiv. ing turkey prices indicate many would rather have chicken. The Labor Day carnage on the highway failed to fulfill predlc tlons. No auto wsa smashed toamlth- ereena and the occupant smlthered An army of kids marched to arhool yesterday, and some hated to go worse than their Papn hate to go to the polling pi are and vote. "These suicide aquad In ths Jap anase forces have all the reckless In trepldlty of Americana climbing Into automobiles when the beer garden let out." (Detroit News) You aald tti a a a Tour corr. encountered an effic iency expert under full ateam yeater- dsT. There waa s lighted cigarette en the floor, one on his desk, and one In his mouth. t win, nr. no piiktki.. (HI. Mtiltetln) MI have, from my old home, some very lovel y pieces of s n tlque mahogany, which have been In my family for four genera tions. But my wife to be Is all for the moat ultra-mndernlMte stuff that no one but a contor tionist could use m furniture " The American Chamber of Com merce of Shanghai "resents" with drawal from the war rone as "dam aging to American prestige." As vet. the opening song of the noon forum luncheon, hsa not been Interrupted by a atrsy bullet. n the event of American entry Into the fracas, the OofC will atav there and fight. In stead, of returning home to make 4 minute speeches. Editorial Correspondence The Mayor It the hminetnt Omnd. paw of ww Blrl, m wwt as tha Dlonne Quint, and three llnm elite fm flhtrle? Teraple. Dm Mall TrlDuna want ada. NEW TORK CIT7, Sept. 5. Another rainy week-end, a bit tough on the Labor Pay eienrmoniHts. Also another thunder storm, more Revere than the one a week ago. A little tree in front of our hotel, protected by a caat-iron frame, was struck by lightning and the top sheared off as cleanly as if by an axe, the glass globe of a street light nearby shattered to bits, Fortunately the family were out for dinner at the time the door-man had not regained his composure when we returned several hours later. Said the charge of electricity went through him too, and made his teeth ache! . Again the local weather man called his shot. Predicted raiu for Saturday but the day dawned Btuffy and hot, and con tinued so, until late in the afternoon, without a cloud in the sky. Then in the brief space of an hour, the gcene completely changed, and it was pouring cats and dogs, by six o'clock. New York has a terrible climate, but there is some compensa tion, in knowing what it is going to be, several hours in advance. Cooler weather was also predicted following the storm. Again the weather man was right, but the heavens are still overcast, there are showers from time to time, so it doesn t look very promising for the double-header at the Polo Grounds, or the tennis matches at Forest Hills. Looks like indoor sports, for the populace in town and out, the movies and the liquor stores, should reap a bountiful harvest, In his Labor Day pronouncement, Mr. John L. Lewis ap peared iu his true light. As has been frequently stated in this column, he is neither the ogre depieted by his foes, nor the demi-god, pictured by his friends. He is first, last and all the time, the radical partisan of organized labor in this country, who has reached the top, bv maintaining an uncompromising aggression, and is incapable of abandoning, or even modifying, the fighting technique. lie isn't a Red, he believes in the capitalistic as opposed to the communistic system, in work and in business for profit; but he also believes frankly in a pro-lnbor government, a government which if carried to its logical conclusion, would amount to a labor dictatorship. Thus believ ing he can t tolerate a president who like Hooscvelt, has the temerity to suggest, that in this conflict between capital and labor, all the right is NOT on one side, all the wrong on the other, but there are rights and wrongs on both sides. "A plague on both your houses," suggested F. D. B. when extrem ists like Tom Girdler, represented the employers' viewpoint. and extremis! b like "Sit Downer Martin," the workers; -which to .lohn L. was the straddle of a weakling and an ingrate, but to any non-partisan, fair-minded observer was the truth. So in this statement, John L. Lewis reveals the source of his strength, from the standpoint of organized labor; the source of his weakness and his danger, from the standpoint of the country. John L. is a vigorous- and pugnacious personality with a one-traok mind that one trade leads only to labors advancement, from an entirely selfish and partisan standpoint It is essentially tho philosophy of a war of unremitting conflict A fine thing for labor, when war will protect or benefit labor; quite the revei-Be, for labor and the country, when wnar uuin NEED is a period of recuperation, readjustment and peace 1 And this is tho great need, at present. .... Later: Our prediction about indoor sports proved correct. Decided to see Ronald Coleman and Madeline Carrol in the Prisoner of Zenda at the Radio City Music Hall. About a mil lion people more or less had the same idea. Motor traffic from our hotel on East UOth to Rockefeller Center, was so jammed, progress at such a snail's pace, we abandoned the taxi, near Fifth avenuo, and in spite of the drizzle pushed ahead on foot. Reserved seats were sold out, so wo took our chance in the Upper Gallery and after standing fifteen or twenty minutes filially got scats. As usual at the Music Hall, the stage show was the real attraction, particularly the amazing Rocketles, thirty girls, who go through their formations and dances, with a precision, that oan only be equalled at West Point. Their efforts were continually punctuated by thunderous applause from the packed house, but in spite of the enthusiasm no enooreH were given, they never are, the entire' program went oft without a single mis-step, like clockwork. These Kockcltes made a trip to Paris this summer and strutted their stuff at the French exposition. They made a tremendous hit, but the Parisian "men about town," are still trying to figure it out. The girls in this contingent are carefully selected hand picked. They are not chorus girls of the traditional type, but girls of education and character, not at all interested in "blind dates." John D. Rockefeller may well lie proud of the new stage-door tradition, his "oollege girls" established. Beautiful photography, gorgeous settings, flushing sword play, daring escapes, dashing romance, make -up this picturixa tiou of Anthony Hope's popular "extravaganza", young Douglas Fairbanks as Rupert doing a particularly fine bit of work. Far bo it from us, to inject any flies into the ointment, the Prisoner of Zends, is true to the best tradition of the late James K. Ilackett, and to those who like that sort ot tlimir it s perfectly all right. The Mail Tribunes itinerant movie critic, just doesn't. We would far prefer a two-bit evening at the Trans-Lux, ... The Trans Lux, are movie, theatres showing news films only, the top price being twentv-five cents. There are two or three of them in New York, but according to the newspapers, two more are to be running, by the time the winter season really starts. .Scenes from the war zones in Spain and China, have increased their popularity, and if yon don't want to stand up. it is well to get mi early start. To the true Traus-I.nx tan, it takes a renl SI 'PK.R-npus out of Hollywood to appear any thing but synthetic. When the rain ceased, night fell, and the lights were turned on what a sight Broadway at Times Square, presented 1 How CAN' one describe itf The whole thing is so unreal, so hide- ibalilc the oiitlander just stands there with Ins eyes pop ping, his mouth open, tempted to pinch himself to see if he is rcslly awake. Perhaps if one could visualire an old-fashioneil street carnival of the better type, and then magnify it. and keep on magnifying it, until it became ss much larger, more complicated, and sensational, as Greater Manhattan, is larger than well say Mcdford. perhaps a faint idea of the net result might be envisioned. It isn't a city street, it's a street carnival of astronomical proportions, in a Maze of movement and color and excitement. The newest development, are the movie "ads" some of them covering an entire block . . . figures that jump about, in an incandescent field, as the lights are switched on and off. Most of them are of the Disney type, with strange animals hopping about, intriguing, humorous, and getting a auirh from the human mass, milling around Iielow. I he selling feature of the ad is subordinated, oftjMi disregarded entirely. The purpose is not to sell, but to attract attention, to impress a name or a brand upon the masses of Now York, and then let nature take it course. ... A visitor wonders, if in such a milieu. XATI'RKean have any placet IJ V. I! Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. P. Signed letter, pertilnlni to parwnai toealib and n?flene. not to dltutt dlagnoal, or treatment. srUI b annrered Ur Ot. Brad; if a lumped ull addrewed envelope la encloeed Letun mould ba Uriel and written in Ink Owlni lo the larft number of letter, receded onlj a few can ba anawared No reply ran be made to querist not cunforminr, to Inttructlon,. Addreat Or. William Brady, tS El Camlno. Utterly, Calif, FIFTY YEARS OF SLAVERY Reader sged 64 years aays he wrote few weeks ago for booklet "The Constipation Habit." He had hoped there would be some suggestion as to the advisabil ity of trying my method under any and all cir cumstances, but since there was not he writes to ask If It Is always advisable to try my method, for Instance , , . and then follows sn autobiography of which the salient feature seems to be fifty years of slavery. "I think I have not missed a day in fifty years when I have not taken some kind of laxative." The poor geek. Abysmal is the word for It, the 'educated" layman's abysmal ignor ance of human physiology, it would not be so bad If he did not glory in his Ignorance and parade It as mark of culture and refinement. Yes, he does; the boortshness of the so-called intelligentsia about the body's functions is notorious. Fifty years or fifty hours, It makes no difference at all. The motor func tion, peristalsis, movement of the bowel Is wholly controlled by the Autonomic or sympathetic nervous system, Just as the motor function of the circulation and the respiration Is. It doesn't matter how much or how frequently you Interfere with this automatic regulation; as soon as you cease Interfering and the effect of the Interference wears off. the natural autonomic control will be resumed Just as though you had never Interfered at all. That Is as clearly and as simply ss I can teach this lesson In physiology. If you are so hopelessly dumb that you can't understand U, why, I'm sorry for you but perhaps you had better go back to your pills. Your I moral fiber is weak. Your Intelli gence is more suited to the purpose of the nostrum and quackery trade. There Is one suggestion I can offer anybody who Intends to overcome the constipation hsblt. Begin a week or two beforehand building up intes tinal vigor, I mean physiologically and not In the alang sense. Begin supplementing your ordinary defi cient diet with a dally ration of vitamins B, Q and D. B. and O, ss t in whest germ or In brewer's yeast (yeast for baking Is comparatively poor in vitamins), is beneficial for this purpose, giving better "tone" to the stomach and Intestine; but the addition of D, by Irradiating dried brewer's yeast with ultrsviolet light of certain wave-length, distinctly Increase the Invigorating effect. Whether you are personally Inter ested In this common complsint or not, It Is well to understand that the Intestine or bowel can no more be Influenced by habit than can the heart or the lungs. There is ample experimental and clinical evidence to indicate that vitamin B and vitamin D In com bination overcome hypomotlllty or sluggishness snd undue Irritability of stomsch and bowel better then either vitamin alone. Ql'RRTIONS AND ANHWERR ralendar Cure for Bed-Wetting Olve the child a small calendar, to keep beside the bed. Boch dry night is to be recorded by one mark (say a blue pencil mark or a circle around the date) and each wet night Is to be recorded by a different mark, say a red pencil mark or a cross through the date. This is most ef fective when a group of children carry It out more or less in com petition. Parents may have instruc tions for correction of bed-wetting on request Inclose a three-cent stamped envelope bearing your ad dress. flat Feet Boy. seven, has flat feet. Docs going barefoot help, or should he be kept in corrective shoes all the time? Corrective shoes very expensive. (Mrs. J. E. O.) Answer Going barefoot always helpful? Going naked still better Idea, is that boy should absorb all the sunlight he can sLend, short ol sunburn, snd try to acquire coat ot tan. If sunlight not available, he should receive dally optimal ratioii of vitamin O. Send ten cents colt. and stamped envelops bearing you. address, for booklet on "Care nf the Feet." Sunshine Please tell me what vitamins sun shine contains. (Mrs. E. M. W.) Answer None. The Invisible ultra violet rays of sunlight convert ergos terol In the skin Into vlosterol, which is vitamin D. Comment on the Dau 5 News By FRANK JENKINS. BIO newa over the week-end. John L. Lewla aneera savagely at P R., calling him an Ingrate and Intimating that ha told out ana then failed to deliver. (Lewis, you know, put up (600,. 000 for the New Deal campaign fund last year. Evidently he figured tnat he could buy himself a President for a half million dollara, but like many another schemer who nss backed a politician, he la dissatisfied with his bargain.) Behind Washington Headlines By H. R. Baukhage Copyright 1937, by The North American News paper Alliance, Inc. (Continued from Page One) Flight 'o Time Med lord and Jarkaon County nutory from tbe files oi tne Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. bd. Note: Perrons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should .end letter direct to Ur. William brad. SI. D.. 2SS El Cam i no. Beverly HUH, lalll. r leases- s.' . . QQMclnfvre NEW YORK. .Sept. 8. New York's most temperamental restaurant man is George La Maze. Sometimes he works in the kitchen, sometimes as a maltrc d 'hotel but wherever he Is the diner knows he Is about snd ftenHOA his touch of artistry. Perhaps a better title for him would be host. He rarely re mains In one spot long. As soon as a place becomes too Aucceasftil he itres of it and is orr to new pastures. He Is equally wen known In Philadelphia. Holly- woon. aarntORB. Miami and Palm Beach. La Mam was the first restau rateur to abolish the printed menu. Instead he usps a portable black- bonrd with the choice dlche chalk ed so big no one has to squint or flh for cyeglssses. He believe-, there are enough gourments In every commun ity who wilt pay any price for the best food and he has proved It. He esters only on the grand scale. Wherever he Is he has choice po tatoes shipped from Idsho, select duckling from Long Island and the prime catches of shrimps and crabs from the Gloucester nets. He goes to the markets himself at daylight and that's a custom too many chefs are abandoning. seems last of familiar characters, such as Bobby Edwards, Son is the Clgaret Girl and Tiny Tim, to cling to Greenwich Village. He still has quarters In Washington Square but has become somewhat a recluse. He's no longer a figure at the bars and waffle parlors, but has become se rious about knowledge and Is an earn est student at the W. p. A. Adult Ed ucational classes where Sanskirt, brew. Chinese, Japanese and Arabic are taught free. Incidentally, in study ing Japanese he rlscovers the mean ing of the word "hobo." Flint, Wyckoff and Jack London, del vers among the submerged, guessed at a definition but never knew. Kemp finds it Is from the Japanese "hobo" meaning on all sides, everywhere. AS for F. D. R., he has learned something from the Lewis blow up that everybody has to learn sooner or later. 8ECRETLY he backed- Lewis ana his CIO (sit-down strikes and all) with everything he had, but PUB LICLY he tried to give the appear ance of Impartiality. (As witness his "plague on both your houses" speech.) People who carry water on botn shoulders usually end up by getting wet, and FDR. is no exception to the rule. F.D.R., bitting back at beetle browed John L., asserts with a fine show of fairness that "both sides have made mistakes" and adds that the conference table must eventu ally take the place of the strike." True enough. But how can anything be settled around the conference table as long as those who sit on one side are armed with ABSOLUTE power under the law, while those who sit on the other side are unarmed and helpless as Is the esse under tne Wagner labor relations act, which Is one of F-D.R.'s brain children? j CAPITAL, which for too msny years hsd all the law on Its side and misused its power, demon strated glaringly the UTTER FU TILITY of such a method of achiev ing harmony. FJD.R, Is attempting to clean up the mess that short sighted employers made by giving labor all the power. It WON'T WORK. The only way labor and capital can settle their differences at the conference table is by MEETING Ab EQUALS. If either side has sll the power, there can be no settlement at the conference table that will be honorable and therefore LASTING. thing that surprised him most, did most to break his arrogance, accord ing to those who have observed him recently. Is the fact that he sudden ly found that all his money, all his alleged power and influence, were utterly useless when the federal gov ernment took htm in hand. He is a number, that's all. He eats, sleeps, works and lives exactly as the rest of hl& fellow criminals do. Like the rest, he can read no news papers. His letters are edited and re typed before he sees them. He csn lis ten to the radio only when the war den decides the broadcast will do him good; read such magazines as the warden selects; see a visitor, once a month. If his behavior is good, sep arated from his guest by a steel wall and a glass pane. Capone has, It is learned, tried to rationalize his position, to picture himself as a Robin Hood. He even has plans for writing a book with this idea undoubtedly a part of It. "I never robbed widows and or phans," he whines, "I only handled race-track gamblers, alcohol racket eers, bootleggers." "Try to tell the Americsn people that when you get out and see If they believe It," Is the answer he gets. There are, of course, other reasons than the discipline of Alcatraz that will tend to keep Capone In line when he gets out. A son who has not changed his name (what's the use says Capone, they'd find it out any how soon enters college. A -72-year old mother. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY September 8. 1927 W. Hatton of Centrsl Point dis plays a 47-pound watermelon at tha CoIC. Weather chilly at Crater lake. Dreams Jubilee dodgers dropped on Tftcome, Wash., from plane. Council sets city streets. to pavs and gravel Five planes on trans-Atlsntlc flight reported missing. Coolest weather of the summer recorded with a maxinrum of M degrees. Gene Tunney is 7 to o favorite to defeat Jock Dempsey In Chicago fight for world title. Registration In Central Point school heavy. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. September 8, IAI7 British premier announces. "There will be no peace, with Germany the victor." Whiskey makinp ceases tonight in the United States, under tha food control law. Italians capture thousands of Aus trian soldiers in offensive on the Gorlzia front. Mrs. C. M. Kldd leaves on sj extended visit in New York state. It is Interesting to know what the other fellow eats. I never dine out and behold what has been brought to the next table without regretting I did not order the same. There is a trencherman who will dine only in places with booths for that reason. He was constantly having his meal spoiled by seeing the more tempting dishes that come to his neighbors. anflball Not Hn !(( 8WEETWATKR, Tex. (UF Rd Strobel, umpire for a softbsll game here. Is ready to stick to the essler sports. During a recent game, a player Insdventeutiy ran into Strobe, and knocked him down. Strobe I fin ished the game but three weeks iatsr he went to a hospital where X-ms showed ha bad suffered fractured ls OIrtli t:rcerf Onel NICK, France. (UP) Young men eaer to escort lonesome women who will pay bills are so numerous on tha Riviera that there is a slump In tha straight "itukle and escort" bus i nesa. "There are 30 men to evet woman In Cannes. Nice and Monte Carlo, sll waiting for a chsnc to be charming for a fee." on, expert said. On uaU ft lb una want ads. At a weekend In Saratoga a while ago I hsd a cloee-up of what nome headline names enjoy after the races Alfred Owynne Vsnderbllt was doing dandy with a Chateaubriand a la Cordon Rouge, which connoted of a dsuble fillet of beef basted with but ter, seasoned and sprinkled with fine. ly chipped ham and fresh bresd crumbs. The entire bit garnished with sliced truffles, brussels sprouts snd small stuffed tomatoes. Jock Whit ney nearby showed contempt for cal ories snd a loo the reason perhaps for a growing waistline. He wsa dallying with what looked to be two mlnlntnre gondolas. They were boM-shspct ba nana skin filled with whipped cream, the sliced bananas previously steeped In Ktrsch. Herbert Bayard Swope was handling sn Interesting salad of filleted smoked herring, cold beef, boiled potatoes, sour apples, all diced, chopped caper and gherkins seasoned with French dressing Then Joan Bennett, or her double, toying with something scrumptious In de serts bartlett pears cooked In vanilla syrup, perched on a timbale of rice core red with meringue and baked Hawkln. my droohng btbi I have a post card from Mason Pe ters, born at my birthplace. Platts burg. Mo., who has returned there af ter years to look at the old home and perhaps refurbish It. Peters was a New York newspaperman of the days of Richard Harding Davis and cele brated as a wit around the Lambs along with Wilton Lackaye. Willie Collier and other trlgger-tongued and nimble minded. Several years ago he decided the metropolis was no place to live and hiked to Arizona where he has been prospecting and doing all right. Another Plattaburg, Mo., born boy, is the film character actor. Sidney Toler. He was born there In a covered wagon while his parents were migrating west. Harry Silvey knows a fellow who held a winning ticket in the Irtfh Sweepstakes but does not live In the Bronx I Copyright 1937. MeNa light Syndicate, Inc.) Harry Kemp, so -ceiled tramp poet. HELP FOR FARMERS READY THIS MONTH PORTLAND. Sept. A. ( API The first allotment of ItOO.OOO for re habilitation funds during the crop year of 1037-38 will be available In Oregon counties thU month. Clifford L. Smith, state director of the re settlement administration, said to dav. Smith reported Oregon farmers have repaid the government over 80 per cent of the maturities due on 3134 rural rrrmbiliMttnn loans. Hie administration advanred nearly SPCHU 000 during the lP.is.-3fi crop year to farmers unable to secure commercial credit. Maturities on 7.0O0 already loan ed for the 1937 crop rear rome due late this fall snd next spring, smith ssM TNTIL the Wagner labor relations W act is amended to provide pro tection for BOTH SIDES, we might as well abandon all hope of settle ment of labor dlffcrncea around the conference table. EWI6 hints broadly of a third party to be sponsored by labor and the farmers. Take that threat with a grain oi salt. John L. may be dumb enougn to put up a half million dollars ot his followers' money in the hope that he can BUY A PRESIDENT, but he isn't dumb enough to start a third party snd thus desl hlmseli Into the discard, along with the many, many others who have started third parties. He Is Just using the third party threat ss a club to shake at F.D.R You can bet on that and not go tar wrong. He may be forced Into a third party, but he won't start one of his own free will. FATALITY IN HAWAII HONOLULU. T. H. VPi The Stno- Japanese conflict has cost a life on Kauai Island. Hawaii. After an argument over relative merits of Chinese generals, two aged eelestlsls drew knives and one was stabbed to death. On the other hand, Kcnji Ohtomo. ia young Japanese, gave his blood to ave an old Chinese. Ah Ming Liu. The two ere strangers. APPLE CROP SHOWS 75 PER CENT RECTAL AND COLON TROUBLES FntiT))1 dent with tv I ron.uttel mtthod. No tcnSimnt to homfj. No lou ot tim from wo ik. Wht hiv don (or thout anda ot othtrev -w cin do (ot vou Lessen whit 11 . meant to tt trtattd bv irtcUIlm who arc lone reHsac4 ia this particular lint ol work. FKFK FOOKLKTCalt er wrfle tot it. Vty jarerestmr tst taitMKftV. Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC Pftrs'cJs end Surge N V Cor. K Purnvda and Grand At. Tatar K Alt 5tS PftrtUM 0e WASHINOTON If you brll.ve in an apple a day. you may be abl to gt two this yar for tha pric of one heretofore. The bureau of agricultural eco. nomlca rpota prospective price de cline, with the 1937 apple crop about 14 percent greater than lut year's, and 33 percent above the recent noma). Women Find Way To Take 0 Fat nsouij.irtj t vontn tr uuqs on ra . . eiittoui aiet ot usreiM. estsout at retnt uiii naiiis with laxri; Um fit-rtducini iroiimvnl n ramo' fat from tbam Jim u it Old tress Uwrtnr Mark han d leal in oeund in it bjobi hi) uktnt it iLd a ftsturtd ip "B lie ' Of St ' ft &ipty. ffontn tin A.Rtr . tcaotutt!? tiff to uu i soea not coot it hno1. rhirold w Duiiirophinoi m tar form 411 tordi rtti in LAX RID hava ar ajad n ohv te'n for M rain W auaranta ma' 1 u itlnui frto from ara aoiaonout er nr:nfii wtmn.-r Tr? It teda? or "tu anon' raci tuarait a wwj can Otl AXIC todat tram mj( dnil st S ' cliitiTali b wm - 'JARMIVH PRIO 5 TORE Med ford, Oregon Apparently the "emergency" still exists In the eyes of the president, for Secretary Stephen Early, once more with his foot in the stirrup sbout to ride back Into private life, again has decided to stick to his Job perhaps until 1940. Ready to speak his farewell when summer ended if his "boss" said the word, and expecting this ttme to hear It, the loyal secretary once more has heard only the request -command to stick around until the present shoot ing; la over. Captain Early put on his official clothes In 1917 "for the period of the emergency," as you may recall the late war was officially descrlbel by the U. S. A. So when, for the scveralth time, he gives up his personal plans and con tinues his service In the White , House, the deduction is that the pe riod of political hostilities has not I expired, snd "there's no discharge In ! the war.' Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gates leaves on an extended visit with friends and kin in Indiana. Time to spray for worms in spplea. ICIDE SACRAMENTO. Calif. (JP)A state wide campaign against suicide, to be waged though the press and by radio, was announced here with the Incor poration of the Suicide Prevention Society of America. Under the direction of Robert Reh kugel of Oakland, the group has been campaigning there agMnst sui cide for more than a year Rehkugel says that a number of despondent persons already have been talked out of ending their lives. Mlrls Dreutn Alike London. up a class of 38 girls was asked to write an essay on what theywould like to be doing in 10 years' time. All but three gave the same reply. They said they would like to be married and have a baby. Some of tliem said they would prefer twins. While neither side has made any public statements. It Is privately ad mitted' that unofficial advisers of C. I. O. recently counselled tho hir ing of some high-powered publicity concern to handle the organization's public relations just as many big corporations do. Whether the suggestion first came from one of the publicity firms Isn't stated, but some of their represen tatives have been reported in the vicinity of C. I. O. headquarters, with their usual snles-equlpment in hand But the salesmen didn't get very far. Mr. Lewis is generally accredited with feeling that C. I. O. publicity can be handled right In the family and sparingly at that. PORTLAND. Sept. 8. lAPt The state library and planning commis sion began a surrey today to improve Oregon's library facilities and bring adequate service to the more Iso- lated districts. The survey, requested bv Miss Hsr- t let Long, state librarian, will be a WPA project. Twenty representative citizens from all sections will serve ns sn advisory committee. Members of the specla-l committee Include Alton F. Baker. Dr. F M Hunter. J. E. Turnbull, Eugene; Mrs Uicy Rogers. Heppner; V. E. Kuhn. Salem; Lucy Lewis. F. L. Ballsrd. Cor- allls: j. Ellrabeth Olsen. Mrs. A. C Mclntyre, Pendleton: Leonard Csr- penter, Mcdford; Mrs. o. V. Wimberly. Roeebung, I YOU CAN THROW CARDS IN HIS FACE ONCE TOO OFTEN WHEN you have those awful cramps: whan your oar-re are ail on edge don't take it ouS on the man you love. Your husband cant possibly know how you feel for the simple) reason that he la a man. A three-quarter wife may be no wife at all if she nags her hus band seveo days out of every month. For t iiree genera t Ions one womso has told another how to go "smil tni? through" with Lydls E. Ptnk ham'a Vegetable Compound. Ik helps Nature tone up the system t hus lessening tho discomforts from the functional disorders which women must endure in the three ordpals of life: I. Turning from girlhood to womanhood. 2. Pre paring for motherhood. 8. Ap proaching "middle ago." Don't be a three-fpiarter wife; take I.YD1A E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUNDS Go "Smiling Through." -rrA ret"1' A ai ,et- .o o"'".etV ofi .i.e, toe ? sTT' ri mf nun . . You, too, can have "Pocket Book Protection" As well as AUTOMATIC CLEAN CONVENIENT HEATING PHONE 7 Our representative will fflurlly rail Timber Products Company ORISON End of N. Centra,! Phone 7