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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1937)
PAGiO SIX TMEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 5, 1937. MEDFORDIWrRIBUNE "Every on l Btiotharo Orego BmiU lb UaJ) rrihaaa." Daily Bierpt BminrAmf. Pobnahad by U EDITOR D PRINTING CO. II-1T II 61 r-ir St.. Phoaa 11 HUBERT W.RUHL, Editor RNBST It UIL8TRAP. Mnagr. As lodapanilaot Newspaper. Batr4 aa tMODd-eiw aiatMr At Mad for. Oregon. andar tat of March lilt. SUBSCRIPTION RATES 9y Mall In Advancat Daily, on vaar II 00 Dally, all month! l-'i Dally, on month 00 By Carrier, in Advtnca Mail ford. Aah land. Jacksnnrllla. Central Point, PboftQli. TaUnt. Oold Hill and on highway. Dally, on a yaar ! Dally, ill months Dally, on month 0 All Urmi. eaah In advanca. Official Paper of the City of Med'ord OfflrlaJ I'm par of Jarkaoo Cnunty MEMREB (IV rilE ASAOUI ATtSD rUfcM Rc lvlns mil Lfuod Wire ttorrlc. Th Aaaooiaiart Pri iclualvalj) an Utll to tht um for publication of all bw llptchea craditad to tt or other wise grant tad to thla papar. and alao to tha local aiwi publlahafl haraln. All rights for publication of t pacta! CgpstohM haraltt ara alsn raaarvad. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advtrtlalnf Itspreaantattvae Offlcai in New Tork, Chicago. Detroit San rranelaao, Loa Angalaa, S a a 1 1 1 a, Portland. St Lou la. Atlanta, "ancouvar. B. C. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Tha ascension or a former anil re formed Alabama Klaruunan to the supreme court bench la hailed ae a victory for "liberalism." aald "iioer allem" having nothing to do, with the tao.000 per year for Ufa pay. accruing thereto. It ahowa a "liberal trend." and, If It keepa up and works out, a repentenat bank bandit may some day be a bank president. The Duke of Windsor (nee King Of England), and the Duohesa will come to America In November to "study working conditions," but not do any of it. ... The cool eves and morna domon tvrata anew, heat radiators make more racket than a rural shlvaree to produce a candlewatt of heet. ... John H. Blggera, director of the . Jobless census, la a Republican, and will receive no pay for tt. This serves him right, Inasmuch aa there waa no Democrat by the name of Leasers tosndy. ... The Governor facetiously announces there will be ample Bonneville power for all candidates by election time, and the rates will be within the reaoh of all."- The ohlef execu tive might have carried his face- ttouanean further, and remarked all wera wired for sound. . The Chinese armies report they are retreating and winning from the Japanese. It will be a good Orl ental trick, If the Chinese can lure the enemy down to their own goal and hold them on the 1-yard line. "HOW ABOUT DOCKING THE "NEXT" DEPRESSION?" (Hdllne Baker Democrat-Herald) Let's he tough and drown It. ... WHY nillNO THAT l'Ff (Oakland (I'ulll.) Tribune) . "Almost 300 were killed Sun day by bombs dropped from planea In that terrible unde clared war between Japan and China I How fortunate are we who live In peace end safety In a country where only 146 were killed Sunday In traffic acci A Loa Angelea doctor slates alfalfa la good for the human system, and finds It la used In Africa, aa a foundation for sslads. In any hard winter, along about tax-paying time. all good farmers allege that If things don't pick up. they will have to eat their own hay. to last till spring Cowboys have started to show up wearing calg-skln vesta and l boot, with everything on them but Irish lane. Prof. Maimer, the scientist, while rolling down to town In his trusty 4d. reports It threw a front wheel The wheel responded to the law of gravity, and Prof. Relmer to the law of stopping right now. t effects of the President's speech at Bonneville Dam a week ago an still Mnwelghed." and "Its future Import still problemsttcal." Outside of csuslng a number of valley Demo crats to Itch like .they would run for the legislature, there has been no havoc. THE Rf.n FI.ANNKI. SCHOOL. of Mr.mriNE. "In those good old days the pres ervation of teeth wss not even a theory. If a tooth ached, 'have It out,' waa the fundamental principle, and. In that day, our folks were strong fundamentellsta. one night Sherman's willing, bsthed his Jaw in 'Mother' Irish, called from sleep, aa. Indeed, waa the entire household oy Serman's walling, bathed hi Jaw in liniment the kind that emelled to high heaven, the nam of which haa failed us and wrapped It In the old red flannel, so common In that day Ah, those old red flannel wrappings) They were conserved, no doubt, from the heavy, red flannel undergarment that everyone wore. If a boy had a bad oold a "painting" of goose-greese. covered over with red flannel, whlrn waa worn about the neck, and came flown over tha chest, waa tha rem dj." v 'Doubting Our President" "Anyone who notea Roosevelt's assertion that he did not In vestigate Black before appointing him may take It for what It Is worth. As a matter of routine business It la customary to go Into the record of every man who cornea up for an Important federal appointment with the utmost care. Without a doubt Roosevelt had a report n Black at band before he was confirm, ed. It may aa well oe added that there la ltttlo doubt he knew at all times Black la a Kluxer and not much more doubt that there la the true, reason why he put the man on the supreme bench." Yakl.na (Wash ) Republic. The above reprinted by the Oregonian on its editorial page, represents partia.m journalism at its lowest ebb. There isn't a statement in it supported by the facts The paragraph ranges from an inexcusable insinuation, that President Roosevelt, in denying that he looked up Senator Black's record, didn't tell the truth ; to a conclusii n that is so palpably false that no newspaper, not blinded completely by a malicious and stupid hate, would even consider printing it. It is true that in most federal appointments, particularly to the lower bench, it is customary to go into the record of the individual with the utmost care. This is because, in nine cases out of ten, the 1'rcsutent and his associates are not personally acquainted wirb the applicant, and without careful scrutiny and a close checking ip, would have to rely solely on informa tion from some self-interested source. OUT this was not (rue of Senator Black. He was wus one of the President's closest personal friends, and most valued supporters. He had ivorked more closely with him perhaps than with any other member of the upper house. He didn't look up his record, because he knew it or thought he knew it. As far as the Ku Klux Klan charge is concerned, the present writer was in Washington when Black's name was sent to the senate, and doesn't doubt for a moment, that the President's attitude toward this charge was the same as practically every other, impartial and fair-minded observer, of the dramatic in cident.. Such an independent 'and liberal minded statesman as Sen ator Borah for example, whi. vigorously opposed the adminis tration's Supreme Court 'proposal, and personally didn't ap prove of Black as a Supreme Court justice rose in his sent when this charge was made, and said: "There never has been at any time one lota of evidence that Senator Black waa a member of the Klan. No one haa auggested any source from wnlch inch evidence could be gathered. We know that In private conversation, not slnoe this matter came up but at other times, Senator Black haa aald that he was not a member of the Klan, and there is no evidence that he Is . There Is no fsct or facts even Indicating It. , . It is rumor,, hear say." With his opposition refusing to take the charge seriously how could anyone have expected the President to do so? There is not the slightest reason to doubt that President Roosevelt, dismissed the accusation, as did practically every responsible authority in Washington at the time as just 'one of those things, kicking up a cloud of dust, in a last desperate and futile cf ford on the part of his enemies to injure Black and embarrass the administration. In fact in all the criticisms we have read, by newspapers and columnists, of the Black appointment, the Yakima Repub lic stnnds alone in questioning the President's tr.ntiifulne.ss. Such caustic and persistent critics as Prank Kent,' Dorothy' Thompson and Hark Sullivan, have gone out of thcur way in fact to absolve tile President of all blame in the matter ex cept that of haste, pique and in the appointment itself, poor judgment. . . DUT the Yakima paper, which the Oregonian sihighly hon ors, not only declares President Roosevelt knew Black was a Klansman when he appointed him, but this it declares is the TRUE reason he ''put the man on the supreme bench t" Of course this would be laughable if it weren't so contempt ible That as astute a politician as Franklin D. Roosevelt, would not only ignore Klnn affiliations in such an appointment, when suspectiny them; but would go out of his way to find a Klansman to place on the Supreme Bench, just goes beyond all limits, of unmitigated and unadulterated nonsense. This would be true of any sane American citizen occupy ing the White House but President Roosevelt I Who nominated Al Smith at two Democratic conventions! Who wont down with him to defeat, at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan! Name a President, who has a cleaner clearer rec ord, for racial and religious tolerance, than the present occu pant of the Wlii'e House! And yet the Yakima Republic declares, the President, not only knew Black wa. a Klansman, but that this was the real reason, he chose him to be a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States! WE can think of no better example, of how blind, unreas nnirtir hate nan eomnletAlv u-nrn the indoniont an A ren. der the victim of it whether an individual or a newspaper, a pitiful example ol futility and incompetence. We don't na.ntain al the members of the present Supreme Court come up to this hiph standard. But we do maintain, that when a vacancy occurs, and a candidate like Hugo Black, falls as he does so FAR below it, to do everything that, can be done to prevent the appointment, is a service to good government. As we see it however, what can be done, now has been done. Justice Black will not resign, and we fear there is no legal way to force his retirement. We can see therefore no useful pur pose, by pursuing the matter further. DEF0RE cbsing the subject entirely however we would like to clear un one poitit, raised by an anonymous correspon dent, who beating his breast with righteous indignation, con demns this paper for "the same narrowmindedness and intol erance, that it ascribe to the Klan, for disqualifying an ap pointee to the Supreme Court simply because some time in the distant past he joined that organization." We fear our correspondent hasn't read this column very carefully. If Senator Black, had thoughtlessly made the mistake, in his exuberant youth, that many other good citizens did, and when he discovered his mistake, resigned, and had no further com merce with the Klavrns Hnd the Kleagles, this column would not have held that fact s, much against him. We all make mistakes. Even when the highest tribunal in the land is concerned, innocent mistakes in the distant past can be forgiven. B UT that wasn't Justice Black's record. As before stated it toward it, not orfly AFTER he had become a member of the Senate, but aft.-r he had been appointed to the Supreme Court; that, in our opinijii. disqualified him, to take his place on the Supreme Court. That was a.'reeord of evasion, moral abtuseness, and a ruthless, u iprinciplod SELF interest. In short ;t wasn't Justice Black's membership in the Klan per se, but the. attributes of character that his treatment, of this membership revealed, that finally determined this column's position, ns to hfs taking his place on the Supreme Court. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Shrewd Japan knows also that tha great nations don't want to fight, so she Is stepping In and stealing China. epHE pacifists, who are well-lnten- tloned but exceedingly alUy. teU us the way to prevent war la to disarm so that w can't fight. This la fine In theory, but in practice some hard-boiled realist Is always stepping In and taking what he wants while the surrounding Idesllsts are too weak to object. That la what Italy and Japan are doing right now. and what Germany would LIKE to do. QMclntyre" digued letters pertaining to pern tout dealt n ana hygiene, nut to disess dlugnoali or treatment, will be anw?ird by Dr Brad) it a .lumped tell addressed envelope la enclosed Letter should be brief and written in ink Owing to the large oumner ot letter received only a ten can be answered So reply ran he made to queries oot t-uiifitrminc to instruction. Addrea Dr. William Hradj. 265 fcl Cam loo, Oeverly, Pa III. ONCE IN F 1VE YEARS. The Final Word Newspaper clippings of item deal lug with rabies, anonymously sent me from time to time, add to the conviction that rabies Is a racket One Item from a midwest rural town says the county footed i "rabies outbreak1 bill of S4.410.7O for the year. comprising pay ment for treat ment of 13S cases caacs of what one can only in fer from the con text. The Item cays there was one fatality from rabies infection, and "the ensuing panic resulting from this death caused a great amount of our ex pense. Not many of the 135 were actually bitten, but were treated De cause of . . "well, to make a tall story short, because of panic. But that $4410.70 la only a drop in the bucket. Generally the people them selves pay for Pasteur treatment unless they are paupers and seek it at public expense. The physicians in the community generally charge 50 ror fasteur treatment, the ltm says. So if loo of the 13S victims of panic were treated by their own physicians. tnat would Jump the cost Imme dtately an Additional H5000. Another interesting item In tne present collection of clippings taken from an Eastern paper. It merely a notice like this (fictitious names substitute-- names given In Item): Al Belt's swing orchestra 7:16 . . . Frantic search of Ohio's Stat Po lice for Earnent Wareham after ho had been bitten by mad dog will be dramatized at 7:30 p.m.-WKZ No better way to propnaate panic than by dramatizing the myth over the radio. It Inoculates children ana chlldmlnded adult even more suc cessfully than does the printing of ugly superstitions. One enthusiastic but Inexperienced young health of ficer (of a V. Va. county), reprov ing me for my teachings, candidly explains "In W. Va. we have a haw time getting out local appropriations sometimes ... I have never had a sertmta situation in regard to rabies. but I hav used other epidemics to dramatise our work. I will probably always do so." Alwsvs, of course. meaning for the health director a term of office, which generally de pends on the whim of the politician who happens to h a ve con t rol ot things. A third it?m is taken from an Oklahoma pa iter. Scarehearf sas "Neglected Hog ntte Kills tllrl. IUrn wtvs 10-year-old girl complained on a Monday that she was not feel Ins well, hut ns If was four weeks i since her pet Spitz had Inflicted slight wound over her left eye, attention waa paid to her complaint. Thursday night she said her neck hurt and she felt faint- and nervous ... A doctor saw her late at night and finally had her admitted to hospital at 2 a.m., but the child died an hour later. She died from rabies, the newspaper item Implies. The Lord knows what the child died of. certainly no physician can tell positively and no pathologist can de termine whether an illness or death Is caused by rabies, for the simple reason that there is no known sne ciflc test. In my opinion the Indi cations In at least some such caws point rather to strychnine poison ing or to tetanus (lockjaw). This child s older brother was bitten on the foot by the same dog the same day. but he Immediately applied tincture of lodln to his scratch or wound and suffered no ill effects, the news item says. It was the "first rabies death in five years." Shucks. maybe It was the first In five nun dred years. IN tha last aunylsia, ono'g view rtpnrriing the Hlnrk appoint- mnt in detoriiiinH by onVs view of tho Suprrmp Court. There are two radically HiftVront. ami opposing, schools of thought in the country today. There are those who regard the Supremo Court at ohsob?oent a sort of constitutional vermi form appendix, the rxcitsion of which would do no serious harm. Therefore the qualifieotionn of a new member, are not of so much important', at long aa he has no police record, and in the olnaa single n be depended upon to support the cnusc , of the under dop. The opposing school holds a different view. They regard the i Supreme Court, aa an institution of preat impornnce, a nee essary balance wheel in our form of democratic government. ! which in its membership should represent, the HIGHEST type, of character, icynl learniiiK. ability and wisdom, the country n? krank jknkins can produce. CRANCK and Rncland say to Mus- . .. .. ..... ' ine first mshio naturally finds no cans for alarm in the Black appointment. The second school, just as naturally D0KS. Ql'KSTlONS AND ANSWERS. Ben Told of a too stout young woman who lost 3fi pounds by talc ing a quart of milk dally with fri-an fruit, no vegetables, only other pro tein occasionally lamb. Why? Mrs S. J. B. Answer My first guess would be that Ben wants to experiment with milk and fresh fruit diet if he can find a gullible subject. If you want a rational, physiological, healthful reduction regimen, send 10 cents coin and stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "Design for Dwindling." Irevenlhe Medicine. Issue of current medical periodical carries this by-llne between Items thruout: "Syphllts Is communicable, controllable, curable." If this Is the slogan Jn the present campaign against syphilis, why does It not aay syphilis Is preventable? c. J. A., Jr. Answer Welt. If all "controllable diseases were prevented there would be nothing left for the public health authorities to talk about, and that's how they make their emolument. lsn"t it? Light and Park. Kindly send me information you have on white people with trace ol negro blood ' bearing children. Mrs. R. T. Answer No foundation for popular myth of "throwback." Offspring never darker than darker parent. (Copyright, IP37. John F. Dille Co.) NEW YORK. Oct. 5. No one knows the why of the Hawaiian orcheatra vogue that jetted up so auspiciously this season. There waa a craze for this p 1 a 1 n t lve type of music about ten .years ago but It did not last long. In about two month It had entirely vanished. There were at bne time this aumer more than 100 Hawaiian or chestras In the greater city. Some , ay the renais sance was due to Increa-wd travel to the islands. And other thought It due to the Ha waiian movie and the song that Bing Crosby bleated so often. The first Hawaiian orcheatra to gain fame In America waa at Nat Goodwin's cafe, "The Ship," at Ven ice. Cal.. about 20 years ago. But they were only pseudo-Hawallans. Indeed, the leader was none other than the now celebrated song writer, Bud DeSylva. Zlegfeld Interpolated an Hawaiian scene with Oilda Gray In one of his Follies and it made a tremendous hit on the road, but aomewhow never clicked big In New York. I like that Jape that Hawallans are always sing ing good-bye and never leaving. Then the marimba band which flourished about 15 years ago. Every smart night club such a Montmartre and Bustanoby's, had one aa a sort of fill-in while the regular orcheatra went out to smoke. Now there are only a few left, playing what remains of the vaudeville circuits. Behind Washington Headlines By H. B. Baukhage Copyright 1937. by The North American News paper Alliance, Inc. (Continued from Page One) to those who are supposed to know what goes on Inside the rather tight little group which makes up the S. S. board. It la an Important step the first In a carefully guarded program which may Include an effort to amend the social security act. What Is back of the strategy Is the very privately expressed fear of in creasing criticism. Or, If not that, 'the growing concern In the minds of the public as to the administration of social security funds. The change of the name of the old age payments waa apparently made for psychological effect. "Insurance" la something a lot more specific to the man In the atreet than "bene flte." The wording of the law will be al tered. If congress agrees, for the same reason. The purpose of the proposed legislation, which will be carefully drawn so as not to arouse any doubts aa to Its constitutionality, will be to link that part of the law which has to do with the collections of money and that part which has to do with the passing out of benefits. There would be no attempt to merge-the two functions, which are now administered by separate de partments; the act would almply be amended so that the passage In the law referring to one function would mention specifically the other. The Idea would be to convince the public that the money that Is being collected Is going to be spent for benefits (excuse us "Insurance") and nothing else. Meanwhile, the first reaction to the change from "benefits" to "In surance" came from the Insurance companies which seemed to learn about it before the general public As might be expected, some of them immediately resented this Implied government competition with their business. Flight 'o Time Med ford and Jackson County history (rum tbt file 01 toe MaU Tribune 10 and tt year ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 5. in 7. (It waa Wednesday.) War fever again hit Europe. Bal kan war nearer than at any time since 1912. Yankees defeat Pittsburgh In teo ond game of world series. Craterlan to show pictures Dempaey-Tunney fight. During the last two weeks, two new cars of the closed type have been purchased by citizens of the community, one by the Schafera and another by the Davlsaona of the Table Rock store. (Table Rock Tablets.) California haa another light earthquake. Ideal Indian summer weather pre vails. Farmers need rain for fall plowing. TWENTY YEARS AGO TOD AT October 5. 1017. (It was Friday.) British force German back eight miles on Flanders front for most "signal victory of the war." Congress votes 16 million for war needs. Forest fires again cast pall of smoke over city and valley. Chicago White Sox defeat the New Tork Giants. 2 to 1, in first game of world aeries. Senate regrets that Sen. LaFoIlett of Wisconsin "has lent himself to German propaganda." Otd-tlme troupers are jubilant over the click of Sophie Tucker in the movies. She was the last Hollywood holdout, and many believed there waa some reason for It. That her voice would not register or she did not screen well. Sophie Is an old-ttmer, to be sure, but far from being wash ed up. She can, any time she de sires, fill a night club In New York or London. There Is a certain some thing about performers of Sophie's era. Including, of course, her. They have studied finish to every bit of routine. It is a polish that comes witfh vast experience and expertness In timing. So pronounced among such performers as Ted Lewis, Joe Jackson, Blossom Seeley and Bennle Fields and Al Jolaon. Among theater folk ten would have sot you a hundred that two per formera who would never marry were Lou Holtz and Clifton Webb. But Holt z went of fthe deep end the other week and while there are no Indi cations of an altar romp by Webb. the Rial to wouldn't wager. Harry Rlchman seems, however, to be the most persistent of the marriage dodg ers. Beginning with Clara Bow. he has been reputedly engaged to at least 50 charmers on the stage and In the cabarets. Only recently during London engagement, one beauty crossed the ocean with s fanfare, ostensibly, according to the public print; to be Rlchman's bride. But she came back alone and the slnper is still whote heart and fancy free. It's a good trick If the lawyers will leave you alone. The present crop-control program of the department of agriculture may be taken out of Its hands. That la. If we can believe some unofficial, long-distance weather prophet, who Insist on reading between the lines of a recent official weather report on conditions In the midwest. The soothsayers say that it fore tells another big drought next crop season. "A serious lack of moisture," the report states, exists In the mid westrainfall In the wheat belt less than one-fourth to one-half normal. If Dame Nature does step in, It will take a large load off the minds of the folks who worry about sur pluses. And It will give Secretary Wallace's ever-normal granary Just about what It needs for success. Virginians returning homeward from Washington to hear Senator Black s radio speech noted with some surprise that the Lee mansion, over looking the capital from Arlington, was Illuminated. The pillared home Is lighted only on special occasions. Inquiry of the guard, however, re vealed that there was no Intention to honor Mr. Black. It was the birthday of th wife of General te George M. Roberts, county prose cutor, baa received word from Mrs. Roberts that his two daughters, visit ing In Clnclnlnatl, have had their tonsils removed. Huskies Warned To Respect Orangemen 8EATTLE, Oct. B. (AP) Coach Jimmy Phelan warned his defending champion Washington Huskies today not to underestimate the Oregon State college eleven which plays hens next Saturday, despite the Orange men's loss to California last week. Phelan told his warriors the yard stick did not show California to be as far superior aa the 24-6 score might indicate, and he pointed out three of Californla'a touchdowns were the result of Beaver fumbles. The Huskies came through their 7-0 vic tory over U. 8. C. with Fullback Al Cruver's broken finger the major casualty. Larry Lance Out Of Oregon Lineup EUGENE. Ore.. Oct. 5. (AP) Uni versity of Oregon grldmen practiced today for their Gonzaga university game Saturday minus the service of Larry Lance, sophomore end, who dis located a shoulder in the Stanford game Saturday. Captain Tony Amato. guard, con tinued out of it with injuries re ceived the week before In the south. Coach Prink Calllson served notice that weaknesses in the Webfooot for ward wall would be corrected this week, with possible lineup changes in tne offing. In France tho victim ef an Fool Joke Is called an "April fish." All students at thA TT. ft n.t academy are designated. as midshln- men. bd. Note Persons wishing to i-ommiinicatr with Dr. urmdy should end letter direct to Dr William Brady. M. D- A El Camino Beverly Hill. Calif. Comment on the Day's News TPUIS paper be!on to the latter group. Not that we regard tin, Supreme Court aa in any sense, aaernscant, either above oritieism, or Mke any other human institution, above making miatahos- but wc o believe, that this department of the government, doea demand a higher type of eharaeter and abilitjv-ahovc all a greater disinterestedness moral courage, a Mrontfer devotion to abstraet principle, regardless of popular or political clamor, tliau an other. - - .aolinl: "Tak. your anidi.rs out M spatn. -hTs they have no buainess to b.. or wall open the hnn1r brla.n rranee an1 Spain an1 1st In the Ruiwisns or anybody tlv that aants to rem. In ana tight on ths aide ot tb Spaniab loyalist." THI point la that tb.y probsbly mran biulnesa. France, with FastiAt Oerm.ny at bar (root door, doean't rant a pup pet fascist state controlled by Mus sollnl at her bsc door. England doesn't want both sides of Gibraltar controlled by ttaly. So they are beginning to tain tur key. IK shtviollnl really bellex-e they mr an b u a I n a a a ha will prob. ably withdraw hu Italians from Spain. But If he thinks they are bluffing, he will run a still taller bluff. TO date. Mussolini has bMtt the most successful bluffer In lu mps' epHS treat nations of ths esrtu thst already are anting roason sbly pretty DON'T WANT TO HOHT Shrewd Mussolini knows this, jo he stepped In and stole Ethiopia, tn Spain, he 1 movtnjt cautioualT to se jtiM how far Franc and Britain will 1st him gat. It's a Joy now and then along the Eating Trail to stop In at venerable Luchow's. Here Time seems to halt. One la back In the salad days where beer haa a high collar and cabbage Is red. There are no social climbers at Lurhow'a. Food Is hearty pig's kmieklcs, sauer kraut, stuff and things and more leisurely, snd wings of talk have a wider swep. The wslters do their waiting method ically and with no special hurry. Jut' aa though they might be lookln sft.r s roomful of friends. Instea of rasping Janr and the shrieks of hl-de-hl there are the low dulcet strains perhaps of "The Blue Dsn ube." Over there Al Smith, nspkln tucked under chin, may be doing right by a bowl of noodle soup and yonder Fannie Hurst may be nibbling at cheese cake. Henry Mencken often cornea In for his favorite brew. So does Theodore Dreiser. Luchow's has been there In the same dark timbered decor for more than 50 years, it I one of the few things In town that ha never charmed. An almost hysterical telephone caller X suspect Oene Crawley could scarcely make himself under, stood this morning. All of a sudden In the bath he was struck with a wonder. A wonder, at this late day. why Mary Plckford didn't name her : Hollywood home Plckford "Dou Outl" (Copyright, 1937, McNautthl Syndicate ) PORTLAND CYCLISTS . QUALIFY FOR RACE UNION. N J, Oct. 8. (API Ray Grant and Mutt Kelly, both of Port land. Ore . were among 10 riders who qualified laat night tor the na tional motorcycle racing champion ships to be held here Wednesday night. a It is eetimsted that a submarine an attain not more than as knot surface speed wiu tha present ,000 , aiwins. . ! I ,r I is ..iK'.l f?T I III less I I IX """""" invAsOOPIJ ;j m ntria Bnntt rvB) .1 i- nf KI IU l whiskey- fried sad gleriom Jit M I I combination of smooth, Bellow, straight II F I I ranvu lines 1 SJB. try tu gaaf fpaBBWl I Old Oicar Pepper h a bl.ad t straight whit- If I I til ki, 0 proof, made br Frinkfan Oimlkriei, Li I M lac, Louiivill. sad Bsltiaor. M I s WHERE OOP NCsiJjSV $100 i i 90 lni j Al.tQ A VAIlABlt IN RYF Qj7 sfjiot?. it I