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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1937)
IfEDFOTlD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1937 MDFORDwTRIBUNI "Brjoa UD Moutbsri) ()reOB ttmdj the fcUlJ rrlboo.'r Dally Breeiri Saturday. UHUrtJHD PRINTING CO. ll-IT-M N. mr St. FboB tl RUUBRT W RUUU D 11 tor. BANfCS'l a. OILHTRAl. Utntftr. So lodpnrtDt Nowvptpor. otar4 u eoo'l-oiiM tntUUi- at Msd ' Cor, Oregon. anrt Act of Mara I, HI SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally, on var II. W Daltr. vtt monlha I.T Da Hi". oo month n carriar in Advance Marl ford. -ah a... kanntHMsL OlBIIII Point, Phoaois. Talent, Gold Hill tod OP hltbwaya. Daily, ona rear f-fl0 Daily. n moolha Dally, ona month SO All tar ma. aaah In advance. Official Vaptt ot tba Oily of MwJfnrd Ul final rapar m jwimb uuuu UfcMltl.H OP lllh AKMM'IAiKI fUtUtt Becelrlm roll I.MMd Wire ServlM. Tha Auitciatad PrM? i aiolual . ao , tit I art to i.ha ua for publication nt all niw il In pate baa oraflltar, to it or other 1a orodtlad to thl papar. and alao to tha local niwi ptibiiahafl tiarato. All rlfhta for publication ot ipaolai .apatchaa l-arali. ara ulan raaarrad. MKMBtttt OF ONITHJD PRESS UBMBKR OF AUDIT BIIRBAO OF OIRiMJUATIONS Advartlalng Rapraaantatlvae OLUtDAY Ofrle.. lo N.w Torn. Chle.io. Detroit HT Fr.ncl.oo, lx Ancelra, a t I I a. Portland. St. Loon. AiLnta. v.nooo.er. " C. ,,s:Rli Ye Smudge Pot II; Arthur ferry. .t.- M onri rnn of "socialized medicine" now bestlra the saviors of the voters in Oregon. It won't amount to much, unless there is "socialised tick" at the gas silos to provide fnst transit to the drug store for the governmental flu pill. A number of Romcos throughout the land have been slain and wounded recently by irked Julletn. The goodlooklng and logical targets. If they value their hides, may have to wear bullet-proof vesta, even though such protection would dull the edg of romance. The Elks tom-cat, who nearly lost all his nine lives, and a right eye, in an alley brawl, Is ahle to see sufficiently to alt up and asa, now the other cat Is making It, TJpstat politicians now allegs op position to a special session of the legislature, to pass a Transaction Tax, to provide funds for Old Age pensions, Is based on fear of Anti Labor fuss laws. It is further aver red a Transaction Tax, Is a Sales Tax (of all things In Oregon) in false whiskers. It might be good strategy to call a special aesslon to do both, and probably get neither. A man appeared this morning, and wanted to know, If your corr. wss a newspaper person. We haven't been so mad. since the time B. Hur Lampman of the esteemed Oregon lan, called us a journalist. a Objections to double-feature film bills are noted, because of their extreme length. Cases hove been re ported where a CCC. en roll re enter ed a movie, stayed to the bitter end. and found a Townsenrt Plan pension waiting for him In the box offlce. "One of the more populous Malay states reports that only five per sons were killed by tlpers in a year It might be because the tlgera don't go 70 miles an hour with one arm around a girl." (Boston Heraldl. It has been remarked, that a similar lack of fatalities on the railroads la due. to the engineer not trying to kiss the fireman. Sen. Stelwer. after 10 years of puhllr service, announces he will not run In the aprlnb. This presents the Republican party with the prob lem of flndlnr a eltlten. able to detent the Boy Wonder of Klamath county at the polls. In the jiresent giddy state of the public mind, this la going to be a JOB. During September B4 driver II eenseA were revoked for drunken driving. The official report does not state, whether the offenders were picked up one ot a time, or en mswe en route home from a coun try dance, Now that they tre dug and sacked,' and fairly easy to handle, farmers report 16 mckn of spuds left In the field, when day is done, have flown, and during the night they henrrt a motor vehicle start up. TIIF OIIOUINO OAL MAW '"At 13 1 wan firmly convinced ol my omlsclence, saw no reason at all why I an oil Id not he trested as as grown woman, rearnted my early bed hour with Intense bitterness, and secretly roparrieri my mother as a dear, sweet but Incredibly ancient fossil out of touch with modern thought, and utterly incap able of understanding a hold, free spirit like my own. "Instead or being new. this alleg ed 'revolt of youth' Is about the oldest thing In the world. 1 have no doubt the cave boy and the rave girl felt that their parents were back numbers, and whenever discipline Interfered with desire told esch other they didn't mean to stand It.' Children have always rebelled against parental authority, bucking their Intensities agstnst discipline, ceaselessly trying to 'put something over.' The only difference between today and dead yesterday la, that our mothers were on the job and did not let us get away with Ik" l ttr.hAnaat. I Radio Seen as Running Classrooms in the Future By LydU amy Bhaw (AP Feature Writer) It's 1947. Forty children are In a cloakroom, scribbling buiily on arith metic problems. The teacher Is scrib bling too. Now and then all pause, listen then scribble tome more. Twenty blocks sway, 40 more chil dren are working on the same prob lems. In a suburb of the city, still more children are busy at the same work. And It's all because of radio. The arithmetic lesson Is being dictated over the air to all schools at the same time. Maybe It won't even take ten years for this to come about, assert Frank Ernest Hill, of the Adult Education association, who has Just completed a study of radio In education. In fact, some schools, mainly those in Rochester, New Yprk, and Cleve land already have Introduced ten tatively the broadcasting of class room problems by radio. And alert Chicago school principals, during the recent Infantile paralysis outbreak, ar ranged for stay-at-home children to keep up with their work with dally broadcasts. So far, however, radio classroom work has been a novelty. Children have heard all kinds of aupplemental work over the air, mainly orchestral programs and speakers. But. says Mr. Hill, the 1047 air cur- Old Customs Spumed in Royal Moslem Romance CAIRO. King Farouk of Egypt just up and popped the question. And Fsrlda Zulflkar, 16 - year - old daughter of an Egyptian nobleman, said, "Yea." Sounds natural enough. But boy. oh boy, In Egypt that's news. And It's only the beginning. What will Fa rid a do about the veil, for Instance. Will she wear It In public? This betrothal bids fair to upset Moslem customs that are centuries old. For example: In Egypt, until re cently, a bridegroom never saw his fiancee until their wedding night. If a young man wanted to marry he approached a "khattlbeh." a wom an whose business It was to help men seeking brides. She visited families with daughters ot a marring Able ago, accompanied by the man's female relatives. To gether they made their choice, and, If he approved and he made his decision entirely on their description of his future wife arrangements were made with the girl's parents for pay menu of the dowry. This was money or .property given to the girl's parents by the bride groom In exchango for their daughter. This custom is being dropped gradu ally among educated classes In Egypt, but It never was observed better than at the court of the late King Fuad, Farouk'a father. Fuad was a stickler in such mat- ters. Queen Nozll, hla widow, spent NORMAL SCHOOL CASI TO PRESENT COMEDY A Students of Southern Oregon Nor mal school of Ashland will present the recent Broadwny success, "Three Men on a Horse," October aa and 39 In the normal school auditor ium. Originally billed for Friday, Octo ber 30, the reservation of the en tiro house to visiting teachers and alumni necessitated a performance on Thursday to accommodate the townspeople of southern Oregon. The production Is part of the pro gram of entertainment prepared tor home-coming and the Southern Ore gon Educational conference. Three Men on a Horse" Is a rtpnrkllng farce-comedy first pro duced In New York In 1035, and Inter adapted as a motion picture It enjoyed phenomenal success on both atage and screen and only re cently was released for amateur pro duction. The story centers around a placid, agreeable little man, Erwin Trowbridge, who wrltea greeting verses for Christmas, Mothers' day, and other occasions. Erwin would lie happy In his suburban home and with his MO a week Job, but for an overbearing brother-in-law and a rather extravagant wife. F.rwln re volts against the tyranny of these two and Instead of going to worn, he winds up in a cheap, down-town hotel barroom, well started on an old-fiiahtoned binge. Erwin has a hobhy of picking the horae as he rides lo work on the bus. and his choices are invar iably right. Here In the barroom he falls In with a trio of race-traca Ramblers who Immediately begin to capitalise upon "Olwlna" selections. Harry, the bar keep; Mabel, the ring leader's moll; the colored elevator boy, Moses: Erwln's erstwhile boss. J. O. Carver; a newspaperwoman, snd a hotel maid from Oarbo's motherland, all became Involved In the mixup. Through It all, however, Erwin has remained the quiet poet phtlosophfr, troubled only by the possible loaa of hla Job and his wife. His reactions to th complica tions build the show up to a no tickling, exciting climax. The ex cellent charsctertrattons by the cast of 16. combined with the rapid, witty lines by John Cecil Holm and George Abbott, give promise of a riotous evening of comedy. Three Men on a Horse," la pro duced by special arrangement with the Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York City. Londoners go to the "gentlemen's n .iKlreaera." There's no such thing as box bet shop. rlculum will Include fundamental ln structlon a well aa aupplemental j work. I "Education by radio la Just packed with dynamite," be exclaimed enthus- laatlcally upon hla return from a na - fttnn.l tttr nt hmarinutitur station., "Cleveland baa already petitioned the federal communications commission to set aside certain frequencies for their schools' use," School programs of the future will be broadcast over short wave fre quencies from a central point, be says, because commercial stations cannot give enough time to schools. The new field will not reduce the number of teachers by any means. Mr. H1U hastens to add. Erven more may be needed, since radio requires teachers who have pleasing voices as well as specialized knowledge. Teachers still will be needed lni olassrooms to check up on students' work, since the pupils can t talk dock to the radio. Books may be displaced to some extent, Mr. Hill thinks. But he says that Is not a serious matter. Spelling Is spelling, whether you learn It from a book or from the air waves. And reference books are always needed, Will rhL new nriticattonal method make teachers lazy? No, answers Mr. pampering care the pedigreed anl Hlll. they will have to work harder. mal has necessarily acquired They will have to do the problems with their pupils. No relaxation Tor them when the radio Is turned on. most of her life In the royal harem until Fuad died. On the rare occa sions when she drove through the streets of Cairo she was heavily veiled. And -now Egypt Is wondering what Fartda will do about the veil. Farouk Is known to have discussed the matter with Sheikh Moustapha el Maraghy, rector of Azhar univer sity and head of all Moslems In Egypt. Sheikh Maraghy la progres sive recently he Introduced courses In English and Japanese Into his thousand-year-old university but he Is attached to certain traditions. Farlda, accustomed to short-skirted sports dresses snd berets, will find a veil Irksome If she has to wear one. j Farouk la In love with Farlda. He takes her swimming and horseback riding, and together they play tennis and go on moonlight auto drives. All this would have been Impos sible not so many months ago. But Farouk, as well as Farlda was educated on western lines. The young monarch had an English governess and European tutors. Farlda went to a Catholic convent when she was eight and remained there until short ly before her engagement. Farouk Intends to bring court eti quette up-to-date. Only recently he gave a garden party for the princes and princesses of the royal family. ' and Introduced Farlda to them all In Fund's day there would have been separate parties one for men, the other for the women. Communications. In the Name of Progress! To the editor: "War Is progressive," says a. L. Bullen. But he presents no facts to subn tan t late his statement. What problems have been settled by mass murder? Tin to Is not a scintilla oi evidence that the millions of young men with all their potentialities that they had to give to society have furthered progress an lota by being served as cannon fodder. Ilie glorlfler of war Is he that Is sate from the firing linen, except In the case of the flndlRt es exemplified by the young Mussolini, another glorlfler of war. No man seeing the mut illation of human beings can feel that war Is a praiseworthy feat. Progrt5s Is the development of conditions whereby all the people are able to lead a better and fuller life. It can only be brought about through sclentllic c d u c s 1 1 o n through the development of the po tentialities that all or us have to give to society. We need peace in order to exert our energy and time towards this end. If this be "de cay" S Mr. Bullen maintains, then assuredly aoctcty mut return to the dark ages, u should be of great satiAractlon to a. L. B. the rapid stride that fn seism la making in the world. Italy's Invasion In Ethi opia, Germany and Italy's Invasion In Spain, Japan's Invasion in China. All this, Mr. Bullen would have us believe. Is In the name of progress. "Make men out ot women." It is only logical that Mr. Bullen shouia still adhere to the antiquated And rocratic theory of the superiority oi the male. If he can believe that war is progressive then he probably holds to the opinion that Japan is in vading China in order to make the world safe from rommunlm. MOM.1E HKONRK. Cold Hill. October 13, 1937. PiiHinlte Worries Ttmn WINNIPEG. Man (UP! Uneasy lie the heads of residents of a suburb here at night, for 30 sticks of dynamite disappeared from a shack and police are unable to establish whether they were stolen by children or sAfe-crackers. Ilrm sold fur 2A t ents HAMILTON. Out. tttP-A stolen diamond ring, valued at MOO. sold here for 35 cents, according w t detectives, One of two men charged with reeeiv.ng .ths ring said that he found It on the city dump ano sold U to hi. companion for , quarter. - Unore Referee BUCHAREST (UP) Asked to ref- era a football game here, a Buchar- est man was a little put out when he discovered that none of the players paid the slightest attention . to his whistle No one had tola him thai the team came from two deaf tod dumb borne. I Personal Health Service By W 1111am Signed letter, pertaining la personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will bo tniwored by Or. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelop U oncloxd. Latter, mould bo brief and written In Ink. Owing to the largo number or letter, So "pl' "n D made queries not conforming to Instruction!. Addrea, Or. William Brady. It El Camlno, BererlyCauf. 1 t THE ATAVIBT After all there I. nn atraln M hUman stock that can claim to be thorobred. It la merely a question of this or that individual or family having the less foreign blood or being the closer In bred. In animal hus bandry Inbreed ing to produce the purest thor obred stock tends to decrease vigor and fertil ity. Everyone who n a a ever kept dogs, cats, knows that the ani mal of fine pedigree lacks the vi tality of the common mongrel and comes off second best In any en counter with the mongrel, save only In a show. The mongrel, having " niniacit wiuwut w I " " w """""J ' It Is generally agreed that the mon grel can pass along to his or her offspring some of the hardy char acters or qualities acquired, though precisely how this transmission ol acquired traits or characters Is to be explained Is a matter for spec ulation. Likewise the pedigreed dog csn transmit acquired weaknesses or defects to his or her progeny. Remember what happened when the black guinea-pig was crossed first generation was all black. But with the white guinea-pig? The I Rom of the flrst generation litter I Cftrrled the whlte character of their I mother In their germ pi asm, for when tnofie blacks of the first generation mated three-fourths of their young were discs: ana one-iaurin wan white. Now the familiar legend of the birth of a black child to apparently white parents again bobs up. It is only a legend, a myth, a folk atory. It never happens. The first generation of a union of white person and negro la mu latto. If a mulatto mates with a white person the offspring Is in variably quadroon that la, an in- rtlVdual having one-fourth negro blood. If a quadroon mates with a white person the offspring Is Invari ably octoroon having one-eighth negro blood and characteristics, such as dark complexion or color, dark brown eyes, perhaps slightly kinky hair. If an octoroon mates with a white person well, you simply can't make even a good guess whether the offspring Is pure white or not. But never is the offspring of any such union more like a negro than the parent Is. How often, or whether, a "throw- hack" happens In anlmsl breeding l rn not qualified to ssy. But I know such atavism does not occur in nu O.O.Mclntvre NEW YORK. Oct. 3S. Diary: A note from Thyra. Samter Winslow, pihe Is back from a Hollywood heglra for the winter. Martha Ostenso tells of a Minnesota m e t r o p oils of 3.000. East Grand Forks, that's a miniature New York. And Julia Shawell sends an autographed copy of her "When Autumn's Here." So talking to Harry Burton about a maga zine piece and our dtys on a newspaper chain. Then out to see a mirrored and leather chest Elsie DeWolfe's shop is making for my shirts, pajamas and such and stop ping awhile to hear Dwlght Fl-.kc chatter through a few chansons. Alice and Mike Hogg, who axe notched high in our affections, for dinner, snd much tslk about Hous ton and Texas and they off to hear Major Bowes broadcast and we to Jules Glaenzer's supper for Mile. Danielle Dsrrleux, of the French films. To bed around 3 a. m. The membership of a country club near Port Washington had the priv ilege of seeing the fabled prowess of the mystery golfer, John Montague, the former La Verne Moore before his trial the other week. On hla first visit to a course In nearly a year, he played with Orsntland Rice and Clarence Budlngton Kelland. In tht t.ike-off game he carded a sensation al ff.V five strokes under par for the fl.'iHVyard layout. His card for that day was one stroke above the course's record msde by a professional. Hells Kitchen, ntntteat of the hard bolted sreoa, is to become a tenement paradise In an ambitious civic project. The Kitchen is not ao tough as It used to be, but they still go for esch other with bare knuckles, rush the growler from front stoops and now and then give a rookie cop a "going over," Young men of The Kitchen hold George Raft as their ld,M ftnrt hRV(? a nair for the exagr- , rt n M , ' tw .J., ,,,-u4 v a M Jt"y Csgney la putl to hare ? m"n ,hlB OTj!ltB?B prisms from types In Ths Kitchen. Persons! nomination tor the mod em author whose appearance most suggest hi works Ernest Henilng say. i metropolitan dogs change In the same way as feminine fash- Ions. Fifteen year ago there was a pronounced vogue for the white Russian woll hound, touched oti NaaaaVa LaWjyJ Brady, M. D. received only a few can be aniwered. maa genetics. So far aa color or other characteristics Indicate a per son, one of whose great grandpar ents had negro blood, la indistin guishable from the general run 01 white folk. This la the scientific and the actual truth of the matter, not withstanding the mean gossip or Insinuations of Ignorant, jealous, vicious busybodles who delight to circulate such nasty stories among their foul-minded cronies. Perhaps an excellent novel could be written about a near atavlst born to a mother who had had an ovarian Implant. But In real life, human life, throwbacks are as myth ical as vampires. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Eleven Pounds a Day . Aged 25. Fighting obesity for several years. Gain In spite of faithful ad herence to diet that never exceeds 12 00 calories a day. Week-end stay at beach, when I exceeded my ra tion by three or four hundred cal ories a day, eating melons and drinking a good bit of water dally, and believe It or not, I gained Ji pounds In two days! (Miss B.L.A.) Answer Oaln probably water. Ex cess Intake common salt one factor. To great proportion of carbohydrate, not enough protein and fat, In diet Is another factor. PI tu ifary gland deficiency fundamental causes in msny cases. Only your own physic- Ian can determine whether there is pituitary Insufficiency and admin ister suitable treatment to correct It Test for Lead Poisoning Work in department of battery shop where molten lead Is used Plant physician examines men at In tervals for lead poisoning, but tells men nothing. Understand you told of a test to apply to the skin. (G.E.) Answer Clean skin thoroughly. Paint on area size of hand with solution of one-fourth ounce of so dium sulphide In one ounce of dis tilled water. If this turns black in one to two hours, it indicates chronic lead poisoning. Of course the test would be meaningless II made when you are In the shop or in the atmosphere or molten lead. Hensltlvlty to Tohacro Smoke When I was 14 my father had to go outdoors to smoke, because the least taint In the air made me quite sick. Now my husband smokes a pipe and gets very mad when 1 become sick. (Mrs. F.C.F.) Answer Some men and women are hypersensitive to tobacco smoke. Just as others are hypersensitive to horse hair or dander, orris root, egg. If your husband wants to breaie the habit I'll be glad to send htm, on request, Instructions. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. U.. 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cnllf. when graceful Dolores appeared lead ing one on a sliver leash a late after noon avenue promenade. Then the chow became a sudden rage, said to have been started by Lenore Ulrlc during her top days . . . The Boston took a spurt when Count Bonl de Castellane came over with his bride, Anna Gould, and became so charmed with this all-American dog that he appeared everywhere with one and was. a Boston owner and fancier to the time of his death. There was a wire-haired vogue, too, and the Air dale had its day, along with the popularity of the Peke and Pom. And so It went. But today the most popular dog. Judged by sales in the fashionable kennels, Is the dachs hund. It went out completely dur ing the war, due to German origin, and was rarely seen save among the plpe-smoklng Teutons in the York vllle bierstuben. One of the assets of the toy-sized dachshund la Its adaptability to apartment living. Few comebacks so chirked Broad way ss that of Jack C terms n. in a prolonged eclipse after a running start that had at an early age landed him along headllner row. This sum mer during the hottest months he rilled a night club with the typical Broadway crowd with his "songs and runny sayings" in the brassy modern tempo. Bagatelles: Oeorge M. Cohan In his new political satire is programmed as Franklin D. Roosevelt . . . The Duke of Windsor's favorite new American slang word is "sockdolager" . . , Oscar Shaw Is said to be the wealthiest of the decade ago Juve niles , . . Lillian Olsh refuses to use lip or cheek rouge on or off ... A London dally Is dickering with H. G, Wells for a dally column. Tableaux: He stood near a Ssks window In the full glow of a furious blush, grinning sheepishly. To a friend who knew him well he con reused. He was conscious of the smile o! a beautiful lady while walk ing along and. halting, he tipped his hat a nd gls need back . In to the dead pan of one of thoee realistic window dummies in sports togs. Figures Atnatlng INDIANAPOLIS. (lP Surprtsuig ss It may seem, approximately two thirds of the motorists in the United State have never purchased a new car. There are 26.0OO 000 car owners in the United States, according to Tod Stoops of the Hoosier Motor club, yei only 9000,000 have bought new cars. Ancient Tori IXscniered MAR-SElUJa. France (UP. Th foundations ot an ancient fort which Is believed to here been Greek Ac ropotis protecting the lower Rhone valley has been unearthed between th Berre Etn and the Rhone lel ta near her. The discovery was mad by Henri Rolland, a local srcheolo gist. Anci.nt Oreekft tlwitat batcbed from fearnadea. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS REFERENCE haa been made In theae chronicles to the wild horae bands that Inhabit the deserts of Lake and Harney oountlea. These animals, which are much wilder and warier than antelope, are the deecendanta of a band of 700 or 800 turned loose on the desert by the Sherks back In the Vt, when the price of horses was so low aa to make rt no longer profitable to keep them. HOT blood runs In the veins of these now scrubby little ani mals, for when they were turned loose the mares were well bred up, and most of the stallions were thor oughbreds. Tou wouldn't think it. to look at them now. The mares are ratty little affairs and. while the stallions, when they pause and look baok after a run, can get a fussy arch In their necka and a partially proud lift to their tails, and can really put on quite a show, they're only runty little horses that wouldn't get a second look in a corral. There are occa sional exceptions, of course, but that Is the general rule. That's what Inbreeding over a pe riod of some 40 years can do. TEN years or so after these horses were turned loose on the range, prices came up and for several years the animals that were turned loose to go wild were hunted persistently and were sold at good prices. Some of those so captured were fine ani mals and sold for better than (300. That wea before Inbreeding got In Its deadly work. Inbreeding destroys horse quality In a particularly short space of time, becsuse It Is the habit of a stallion to gather a group of mares around him snd hold them In a band year after year until some young stallion comes slong and drives him out. This younger stallion la apt to be a son of the elder one. so the vicious circle of heredity goes on unchecked. HORSE hunting still goes on in the deserts of Southeastern Ore gon. It isn't really a business, pur suit. It could be better described as a form of gambling, and everybody haa a certain amount of gambling blood In his veins. "The gamble lies In the exceptions noted before. Here snd there, among the inbred bands, la a good animal, and at some time during the year nearly everyone living in these vast deserts takes a whirl at horse chasing In the hope of bringing back an ani mal that will turn out to be a Jewel. They run them Into wins-gated corrals., they ride them down and rope them, they trap them at springs and at salt licks. (The traps are nooses operated by a trigger, much like a rabbit snare, and attached to heavy cloga. Here and there, they run them in In bands and butcher them by wholesale and make fertilizer or dog food of them. To this writer, that seems a re volting enterprise. The horse Is too proud an animal, too much tied up with the history and progress of the human race, too much a creature of sentiment and high tradition, to be devoted to such a fate. But it Is true that the mustang bands of the Lake and Harney des ert, when they become too numer ous, do eat a lot of grass that is needed for cattle, and their numbers have to be kept down In one way and an other. N CONSIDERING the wild horses of Lake and Harney deserts, don't let your Imagination mislead you too much. Proud palomino stallions thst ( when run down and "gentled win be the cynosure of all eyes and will make their possessor an envied ma are about as scarce as gold mint They exist chiefly In the minds r writers snd the movie scenarist. But the wild horae bands do lend an Interesting touch of color to the wide desert coutnry, and this writer, for one, hope it may be a long time before they disappear. Beck's Introducing Another New Bread Beck's new Deluxe loaf of bread. the result ol months of extra work in perfecting a formula, which was Intnviuced to southern Oreon today received a gratifying welcome, ac- cording to Michael Been, owner Ol Becx's Bakeries. The new bread, which has an at tractive orange, blue and white wrap per, la a companion loaf to the new Triple "T" recently introduced by Beck'a. Mr Beck said. "We believe we have the tlneet loaf we've ever made and the huge sales today has convinced us that southern Oregon housewives hare faith In our belief." The Vether. Northern California: Fair tonight and Turwiay; with local fogs on coast: no change In temneiature; genUe northwest wind off coast. Oregon: Fair tonight and Tuertay: but morning foga in west portion: little change In temperature; gentle variable wind off coast. Phone Ma We u nsul away joui rafuat. City Sanitary Samoa. j Behind Washington Headlines By H. R. Baukhage Copyright 1937, by The North American News paper Alliance, Inc. (Continued from Page One) of nls own as he is. This wss revealed dramatically at a dramatic moment the eve of the last election. Frequently, the president spoke to his friends during the campaign In Massachusetts with a warmth that showed he gave his son full credit for his share in the victory. Of course, there la more than a personal political career involved In the appointment. If "Jimmy" makes good, he will at the same time be solving an Impor tant administrative problem, doing a stroke for the reorganization bill. One of the most difficult situa tions facing the president Is main taining contact with the heads of the government departments and divis ions. Its solution would go a long wsy toward selling congress on the Idea of the "personal advisers" which Is a part of the reorganization plan Furthermore It would cure a lot of hitherto incurable White House headaches, smooth a number of ruf fled departmental spirits and oil the machinery of government generally. It takes a vivid imagination to predict what will happen on Capitol Hill after November 15. One of the senate's leading "un willing voters" was the late Senator Joe Robinson. He Is credited with having cast more unwilling votes In the last year than In all the rest of his career. Two leading "unwilling voters" are left. Jack Garner Is one, whose disposition to corral, If not to case, further ballots for bills he doesn't believe in may have consider ably cooled. Pat Harrison, unless he has chang ed his mood from' the one in which he departed, feels himself free of obligations. The one vote that gave Senator Berkley the leadership wipes out that Senator Pat might have csst for the administration if he had won. These three men. among them selves, had a total vote-getting power in the last senate that was equal to some of the best of the Republican horsemen when the G. O. P. rod high, wide and handsome. If they voted against their convictions. It ill became their followers to gag at legislation they didn't like. The lack of unwilling votes may be the administration's biggest problem In the senate at the coming session, say the wary. Enter a new deal in national financing. In the future, according to the telescopic observations of some obser vers. America will not have to depend upon the millionaire to supply the golden sinews of government. In stead of selling big, long-term bonds to plutocrats, the nation will draw its funds from the little fellow who buys baby bonds and the contribu tors, humble and otherwise, who pay the social security taxes. SCIENCE ends DANGER oWINTRY HOMES New discovery cuts fuel bills up to 30 makes homes easy to heat FROM the .Tohns-Manville lab oratories has come an amazing new insulation, a light, fluffy, wonl - substance that is actually n from rock. It looks like cot tit is a pure mineral, with all haracteristics of its stony '1 clean, fireproof, vennin irimf, permanent, odorless. When installed in your attic floor or ceiling, it forms a heat-proof har rier more than 3 inches thick. Re sults are astounding. Costly heat is kept inside the homeland you can depend on savings up to $0 on your fuel hills. Furthermore, in the summer, your home will Big Pines Lumber Co. Dependable Building Advice phone 1 6th and Fir Streets STOMACH TROUBLE Chinese herbs will give too rellef-no matter what you ire arMlctcd with you owe it to rourtell to oae thl, .pportunity to regain your neallh. than', herb, nave restored nraitn to thousand, ot people Why not roar lo ruu have lias. Constipation, stomach Trouble. Bheo mallsm. Hay Fever, prostate trouble. Ulcers. Children's Heri U.ltln. ....... ...... k .... trouble. Plies ihronir couih. Hin Him Preure arthritis. Colitis smousneaa. appendicitis, r.iiu,. tnrmt, ,,rt L1 Bladder .".n.";, ,,,",M"' -on relief ".hen other, fall Free ron.ullaiion Opeo 10 to P. t. CH CHN t ,, , , M ruea-Thor. 10-IJ M. Chmd on Chines, Med Co I3S I M.7B At the present time, th treasury is replenishing Its available fundi by selling short-term bills, but the pol icy heretofore has been to supply th government's Important needs by th sale of bonds. Recently, however, there were complaint in banking circles that the government's long term financing was absorbing th capital of the country to such aa extent that private corporate financ ing was being interfered with. Thl accounts for the short-term financ ing It is now doing. For It long term financing, the government now has an increasing outlet In It sale of baby bonds and in the expanding volume of revenue from social secur ity tsxes In the long run. Treasury offtclsJs believe these two source erf money will take care of Its long-terra financing to such an extent that corporate Interests will no longer b handicapped by the competition erf the United States treasury. The president hesitated befor ha brought., his ..son ..Into ..the.. Whit House family fearing the cry of "nepotism." Friends persuaded him to do so. John Adams, when he wss elected, hesitated to appoint John Qulncy to the post of minister to Prussia. He consulted George Wash lngton. Washington insisted that th appointment be made. The son successfully negotiated a treaty with Prussia. When John Adams left the White House, John Qulncy was then well on his way. Flight 'o Time .Med ford and Jacksor County history from the fUes of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years nsn. TEN VFARS AGO TOP AY October 25, 1927 (It was Tuesday) Ruth Cider, svlnrrlv fntu In Atlantic near the Azores, reach Portugal. Klamath-Ashland highway will bo gravelled next year. Snow storms at Crater Lake threat en to halt park work for year. Police to dump moonshine selsure in sewer. President of American Bankers so ciety declares "the nation needa new faith snd less demaaoenerv in nni(. tics." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 25. 1AI7 (It was Thursday) 'I'll take no nonsense from Amsw. lea. after this war Is over" reported threat of kaiser to Ambassador Ger ard at Berlin spurs Liberty bond sales. British and French launch terrific offensive along western front. Italian army meets with serious re verse on the Isonzio front, and Ger mans take 30,000 prisoners. The city authorities sold at auc tion at Helms' stables Thursday four stray horses whose ownership had been advertised for several day without rpsult. The horses spent last Friday night in the yard at W. F.. Phlpps home on North Rtverside, greatly discomfiting the whole neigh borhood. Next morning Chief of po lice Hittson, with the aid of a buck aroo, rounded up the horses and put them In the city pound. The horse brought $40 at the auction, being bid in by Dr. Helms, the auctioneer. Later he offered to sell two of th animals for S3 50 each, but found no takers. SoJJti Pnt C-,-,. IT- . Prnm .olid rrwk, JohnvM.BTflle aukv n in.nl.ilon ti.t .t Lit nuke, bom ff.lly li ..hie. Limt.toD. U actuUT Ef.wh'."Vi.",S'- """v"1 MiSi into ban ib.i h.ve all tie ppeu.ueet rottoa h. (title. he up to 15 degrees cooler on the hottest days. Experts agree that only thick rock wool wdl protect homes against heat and cold in I truly scientific way. Phone us today, and let ui tell you how little it will cost to make yotu home really livable erery day in the year. There is no obligation.