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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1937)
PAOE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OKEGOX. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1937. ,TBIBUNI SvryoM la Southern Orate Smda lh Hall frlhaa.." Daily Rieept aarerta. pabllen.4 W IIKUrUHD PHINTINtl 1XS II N ill 8 KUBBR'I W HUUU SMIlor. BNBB1 B U1IJJTHAK Mnr. U lartepaon.nl N.wjpap?. lot. Orssoa. aortal axl ' March I. !' UBi:Bll"TIOH RATB 8 Hall Id art.ancai Dally. on. "r nan, all month.. ... .... I.ls Da.ll.. ooa moot. . J Ki-i Kiml aoia am m blgnwmr. Dally, od Dally. month Dally, oo month All wrtn. ln on Official fP City ol tdf Official P"P Wrkwrn wunty TkMBKH It IHfc 4WHMaAriCU XZ i'll...n IT... "l11,'B"o'l VM Utl.il to lha uaa fot ooolloallon ola.ll 0. 1l.pa.caa. orailllart to " wlaa orartllart to thl opr o alno to (ha loeal nt oubll.h.rt o.r.lo. Ill rlihi to" ooblloatloo ol .paol.i yBUHBH 0 irWTBP HRIC8B MEMBER OF AUDI! BIIRBAD Of CIP.IMII.AT1UN8 art.srtlalns BapraaaqUtlaaa alMMkU.. Sao irranclaoo, Uo. Ana.laa. J.altl Portla.irt. L Lnola. Allanla. anoooar. i3J? Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry. Th. oiri frlond of Premier Miia- ollnl, who shot French count In tha upper leg, when he "tallied," naa been denied admission to niuo.-v.. In lend ore beset by alien agl- runnlner hOE-Wlld. thU It eomethlng. . prices of tlckot for the neat Rose owl game hove been advanced. " will be worth It. to ace California get thumped by Pittaburg or Ala bama. a a a In a aeries of "non-controversial" arttclea published in the Oregon imimal. nn the hydro-electrical sit uation ln thle atate, five motlvea art Hated at actuating the leadera at movements oppoiied to power eompanlet, even If they do pungie un a aoodly tharo or tne wace. mu- tlve No. 5 It recorded at: "Just for the Hell of It." For accuracy ana brevity of ttntoment, thlt deserves the Pulltner Price. CO.MFOBTINO ANGELS. (American lotion Monthly) "A member of Oallatln Post at Bowmen, Mont., reports that Commander Earl Walton haa ap pointed on hla stele committee Dr. R. 8elt. M.D.: H. H. Dokken. funeral director, and Roy Ayera, tombstone manufac turer." a . a The wrestlere have color. One hug-acd-haul man, Informed by a group of lady fani hit opponent would apply the airplane pln, fell ln a peeudo faint. A 40-mile per hour wind whipped, but did not conquer, the valley yea- terday. It blew all the autumn leaves serosa the street, and an ino m papers up the alleys. a a The Elka tomcat. In a burst of ferocity, that waa not a bit lite him. captured a mouse yesterday. The hide will be made Into a rug, and the ears used as a watch charm. ... The eoonomlo situation has caused a number of astray Republicans to admit they voted lor Hooseveit tne first time, but not the last time though those firm In the faith hold If thev did It once, they did It twice, and are not yet seared enough to toll all. Demorrnta deny any fear, though their knees, like King Uel shsEter'a, Just before the handwrit ing showed up on the wall at Nebll ehadneraar'a banquet, "smote one against another" . . (Daniel (6:8). Braall, after seven years of trial. In which millions of tons of coffee were destroyed to boost the price, have quit. Thev were unable to real la the New Deal dream they would have too much by not having enough. a a From what the sport pnges any. the University of Oregon footbnll fcsam has more the matter with It when It wins, than when It loses. . . PROl'll PAPA Pitonnrn (Ijlkevlrw Kxmnlnerl "Frnle Stelglcdcr has returned home. He states thst everybody earn the new daughter is good looking and cut aa the dickens and looks Just like him. we know Ernie Is mighty proud and well he should be. but we can't tee how all those statements can be true." a a a Flocks of wild geese honked over the city early this ah., like members of the younger set getting home law from a country dance. a . Among the leading signs of a hard winter ae the increased number ot wanteds In the papers of the stale, urging the return of overcoat tsken by mistake from churches snd res taurant. a a a Hall fell the first of the week, peasant report. It la the first hall hereabout that caused no hortlcul consternation and ruination of the pear crop. When George Meredith was resd tng manuscripts for an English pun Usher, he recommended the rejec tion of Thomas Hardy mora. MEDFOI Ramsay MacDonald FN the death of RamKay MacDonald, England loses one of her truly GRKAT men. In the probably occupy a place in the to that occupied today by Abraham Lincoln, in the United States. In fact there are many similarities in the careers of these two heroic figures in the unrolling pageant of Anglo-Saxon democracy, England's great labqr leader, and America's Great Emancipator, even though the former first opened his eyes on this world, after the latter's eyes were forever cloned. O0TH ware born in dire poverty, both had no formal educa tion, but educated themselves; both were devoted through out their lives to the betterment of the suffering and disposses sed ; both were mellowed by romantic love and saddened by personal tragedies; both presumably ruined their early careers by opposing war; both lived to receive the highest political honors within the franchise of their peoples. in fact a book could be written, devoted solely to paralleling these two careers, from the date of birth to death, their stories seem so strangely woven from the same life thread. AND spiritually they were ATpTinan war liftnmtua hn aid did the same, when England declared war on the Boers. The former wrote friends his public career was over, while the latter was overwhelmingly beaten in his first political effort in 1900. It was Lincoln's fate to be oountry in the most sanguinary history, but force and bloodshed sickened him to the soul, and it was he who forever preauhed charity to all, and malice toward none. Had he lived, he would have taken the middle of the road, opposing with every power at his command, the extremists on both sides, during the period MacDonald was also a middle-of-the-roader, when finally he came to power. He fought with eiiial vigor he fought the a result he was a victim, as Lincoln was the victim, of the slings and arrows from the extremists on both sides. The radical laborites accused Jiim of deserting his principles and truckling to royalty; the Tories condemned him as a calcu lating Kercnsky, a traitor in time of war, and a Fabian revolu tionist in time of peace, lacking the courage to parade in his true colors. OAMSAY MnoDONALD had his weakno-sNPR, but lack of courage was certainly NOT one of them. On the contrary he will down in hiRtory as the one honest, courageous and con sistent pacifist, ever to hold high office in the government of any world power. He not only opposed the Boer war, but when the Fabian society of which he was a member, refused to do so, he resigned from that distinguished organization and publicly repudiated it. When the World war came, however, was the time he showed the iron imbedded in his dour Scotch soul. His own labor party endorsed the war. ho he resigned as its lender, repudiated that notion, denied that Britain's honor was involved by the invasion of Belgium, and talked against the war whenever opportunity offered. Later when he tried to visit hia son in a hospital near the front, he was arrested and escorted back to England, under an armod guard, escaping imprisonment and trial for treason by the narrowest of margins. But he never relented nor recanted, he continued to declare THAT war and all war both futile and wrong. In fact no man in English public life ever sank lower in popular esteem, than Ramsay MacDonald in the period from 1914 to 1918. TTe was hated, reviled, lampooned, his shoulders beut, his hair turned white, he aged 20 years in four, and yet his spirit for peace was never broken. And seven years later this land, declared over a world wide radio hookup, while Stanley Baldwin and David Lloyd-George looked on approvingly: "People who seek safety by arms are like people seeking safety under tree in a thunder storm. They are at the point which la first to be struck when the storm breaks." AND KIYCiLAND AND THE ENTIRE WORLD CHEERED I We don't know anything in modern history or ancient for that matter, more dramatic than H AD an assHssin's bullet cut down Ramsay ManDonaM then, as was the case with Lincoln at Ford's theatre, the public mourning which swept this country, following Lincoln's death, would have been repeated throughout the Kritish Isles, and today Premier MacDonald would nn doubt have as exalted a place in Westminster Abbey as Abraham Lincoln has in Wash ington, D. C. But such was not to be. elevate the name of Ramsay MacDonald, to Knftland'B hall of fame. He suffered personal and private martyrdom enough, political defeat, the loss of devoted wife and favorite son, poor health, suffering and virtual blindness, but nothing to drama tize or exalt him before his people. N' fact he passes on at one of career, when the peace he threatened, and the war spivit he returning to popular favor. We have an idea he was glad to go. He was old and very ired, and could see nothing ahead but more pain, more heart ache, more shattering of his herivhed ideals. He bad fought the faith, let some younger man take up the cause of world peace, and at the risk of calumny, disgrace and even death, carry on I We trust be was not too disheartened at the prospect. For he can rest content. Hi; cause right he need not worry, sonic HELD IN THEFT BAKPR, Not. 10. I AP) Andrew K. Mnser, assistant manager of ralk'a. selling agent of Sears-Roebuck com pany, was arretted Tuendav afterno-m on a charge of stealing lw from the company ufa Sunday night. perspective of history; he will hearts of his countrymen, akin kin also. Lincoln opposed the tiplint - orl if vns uniitat Afanflnn. a war president, to lead his and destructive war in all its of reconstruction. the Tories on one hand, while Communists on the other. As SAME man, as premier of Eng that! No sensational martyrdom will the lowest orbits of his public lived and fought for is again opposed all his life, is slowly life-long principles and most the good fight, be had kept was unpopular, but it was younger men WILLI Miwr waived preliminary heartntt in Justice court and was placed in the county Jail In lieu of $1000 bond. A complete Investigation by city and state officers revealed that the rear door found open Monday morn ing waa opened from the Inside and that the safe had been opened by operation of the combination before It was battered with a crow-br. Officers said they recovered MOO of the loot alone with the tool used in t'-e crime. Uaa MsU Tribun want ad. Personal Health Service By William H lined let ten pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dteae d lug noil or treatment, will be ankwered by Dr. Brady If a stamped elf addressed envelope U enclosed, tetters should he brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answeied. No reply can bit made to queries not conforming to Instructions, Address Dr. William Brady, 205 El Cum I no, Brrerly, Calif. NATURAL RRRATHING Last week we quoted from Hald- ans'a "Respiration" (Yale University Press. 1D3S) the I ol lowing: The common symptoms or o o m p 1 a lnts of neti r at h enlc persona or those suffering from fatigue or shock are. analogous to the exaggerated reflex restriction In the depth of breathing and the Inability to hold the breath (as, long aa a norma) person can, say 40 seconds). All these symp toms seem to be due to what Hugh- llngs Jackson called "release of con trol." U Schafer'a method of artificial respiration (the prone pressure method universally used for resus citation of victims of submersion. electric shock, asphyxiation with smoke or gas) Is applied to a normal subject who voluntarily suspends breathing. It .is quite easy to main tain a rhythmic flow of six quarts, per minute more or less, of air Into and out of the lungs. That la the average amount of air breathed ln minute by normal adult at rest. But If the subject voluntarily overbrcathes. that Is, takes regular deep breaths, but without violent effort, at the rate of twelve a min ute for a period of 1 to 2 min utes, until so much carbon diox ide Is washed out that apnea en sues a period of a minute or more when there la no desire to breathe and no need to. and then the prone pressure artificial respiration la ap plied, there la a board-like ragidtty of the chest and belly muscles which resists the attempt to compress the thorsx so completely that little or no atr can be pumped ln and out of the lungs until the period of apnea passes end the natural desire and need for oxygen returns. This phe nomenon la called the Herlng-Breuer reflex (Herlng and Breicr first noticed and described It) and It serves as a protection against over breathing or over-vent Hat Ion. The neurasthenic patient nuty feel that "he cannot expand his chest to breathe. Just as If It were mechanically restricted and he de velops symptoms which, with the frequent, shallow breathing, Haldane colls "asphyxlal." j Right here I beg to quote from article printed ln this column last year. "When anoxia (oxygon deficit) de velops In the course of an Illness the Intellect and the sensen become -O.O.Mclntyre NEW YORK, Nov. 10. Elmer Davis la one or the versatile litterateurs who cama out of the same Indiana town Aurora that waa also the birthplace ol Edwin C. Hill. Davis is a Rhode scholar , but one of those who never mention It and has no truck with the pseudo -literati. He waa for time a leading editorial writer on the New York Times and the youngest ever to con tribute to that ponderous potpourri. He was also a voyager on the famous Henry Ford peace ship during the war and wrote some of the most interesting piece about that Jaunt About 18 years ago. Davis decided to cut loose from all salaried Jobs and write aa he pleaded, when ha pleased. And he has become one ot the successful free lances, having contributed to almoin every maga aine of prominence In both the United mates and England. He la also the author of a dozen books, ranging from the biographical to mystery and light fantasy. Re cently he has been a topical events commentator on the radio. He lives on Morntngslde Heights and that sec tion la the locale of many of nis stories and eeeays, Hr-nry Luos, publisher of tha suc cessful Time and Fortune. Is said to be aprndtna; as.ooc.000 to put Life in the samo bravKet. His pic turlslnfi Idea got away to a Hying start and the problem became one of holding down circulation until advertising caught tip. He Is a mave rick of the publishing field, each one of his maKsrlnea being hooted as Impractical at the klckolf. Luce mas born In China, his rather being a missionary. He was graduated from Vale and began his qulnotlc pub lishing sdventure with a classmate, who died. His wife Is the loiely Clslre BtxMhe. author of the top nit play, "The Women." She la reputed to be giving her royaltu to worthy charlllea. The latest of tho publishing ven ture hss been Ersklne Clwynnc s re , 'val of his Tana Boulevsrriler. which, unlike the weekly New Yorker, ap pears monthly. Owynne, a blue blood relative of 1h Vanderbllta, had a siaaMe list of limiry advertisers lor a start. He hss spent most of nis time mice the war In Pans, where he was born snd was a rousing spirit In the American crowd that circu lated about Plsoa Vendome. His mother still lives there. He hsd a twin brother with whom he fought ,lde by side in the world war and who waa killed In an air battle Owyiine. a silken voiced young msn blonde and with a cherubic fv-e and seraphic sail, baa fooled many urn EE if El A Brady, M D FOR HTEADY NERVES dulled without the patient being subjectively aware of what haa hap pened." (This accounts for many Inexpli cable or Irrational decisions made by ailing folk who are not Incompe tent ln the ordinary lay or legal sense). "An Individual In the earlier stagea of anoxia may feel quite con fident that his mind Is clear and his Judgment sound when in fact he la aberrant, lack self-control and Is likely to behave In an unreas onable manner. His memory la Im paired, hla appreciation of time Is altered. Understanding Is impaired more than sensation. The subject sees without knowing what he sees. "Great muscular weakness and easy fatigability are characteristic effects of anoxia, whether In Illness or In mountain climbing (or In air sickness when flying at great alti tude. Nausea, vomiting, or loss of appetite occur rather where the anoxia la less gradual In onset, aa In mountain climbing or flying rapid, shallow breathing Is typical of anoxemia. " In "How To Breathe" (booklet ln Little Lessons series, by William Brady, Mi)., D.P.M.) you will -find detailed Instructions for the belly breathing exercise which I recom mend for all who have an oxygen deficit. It takes many months of practice to unlearn unnatural breath ing and to recover the habit of nat ural breathing. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Climate. Can you tell me whether Strepto coccus hemolyticus, causing sore throat, with some Joint trouble, thrives ln the southwest part of the United States as It does In the north east? E. T. Answer According to recent Inves tigations, patients with such Infec tion get along better in the south west. 1 believe It depends on how much time they spend out of doors, rather than on any mysterious erfect of climate. . Regeneration rtegtmen. How can I obtain a complet copy of the Regeneration Regimen? I am approaching fifty and feel the need of some such rearrangement of my diet and rotine. H. M. Answer Send ten centa coin and stamped envelope bearing your ad dress and ask for it. Copyright 1937. John P. Dille Co. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady (hould lend letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M 1.. '266 El Cnmlno. Keverlv II II Is. Calif. in rough and tumble scraps In his play-boy days. Several of those worsted mistook him for a fop. Oddly, there ha never been a strlctty Broadway magazine to pros per, although there taava been nu merous gallant efforts. Among tne first was Broadway Buze. a frothy sophisticated but impersonal collec tion of gossip, sponsored and edited by the late Eustace Hale Ball, it died aborning. Lcander Richardson, talented writer, and W. A. Brady, press agent, also fathered one that got no farther than the "dummy" for the first Issue. Richard Harding Davis had a hand In one that also died Ingloriously. Then there was the infamous Broadway Brevities, which got away to a fairly good start and really cut the pattern for the type of gosulp column that en dures today. But its editor got tan gled In some sly blackmail attempts and the magazine suspended while he went to Atlanta to reflect. Broad way, from a publishing standpoint, does not react as a geographical Unit. It craves publicity more than any other section, but It like to be a part of the general survey. Too. there la to little left of the actual Broad way that it could not support a magazine. (Copyright. 1937. McNaught Svntllcate. Inc.) When winter weather irritates, rough ens and chapi your skin, then Chamberlain's Lotion, the lotion that tjifiniref, it your friend in need. Often, it smooths away the roughnest aver-night. makes your skin attrac tive again. A clear, golden liquid, never sticky, greasy, gummy not 'messy,' Chamberlain's Lotion dries with convenient quicknen. At all toilet Codi counters. - W JkXt I riu rvrl tin lJTvricn In-., r i Mnd rrw trUl Mm '4 RECTAL AND COLON TROUBLES fcnlirtly dm twaywith tv mn-UTtif at mcthodt. No j cnfmrmM to homf. No lot of timt from work. Whit w hart don for thouunda of ctrtata w can do fot yea Lrn what it . moan rfi 1st. traittd b trpciaUta who ara long eiparitfictd at thta pariicttlaf lint of work. rRKK ttOOKLFTCTI r wrff tot it. Vttf j'ererrtTifif o4 tastntrttvm. Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC Pftrvfciait n4 SurgeoN K S. Cm. t Bu-i(!a aid Crnd A. Behind Washington Headlines By H. R. Baukhage Copyright 1937. by Thi North American New paper Alliance. Inc. (Continued frum Page Una I ln Irons and prosecuted to full ex tent of law on return to United States." "Labor relation ln the shipping Induatry." says Mr. Kennedy's sur vey, are characterized by "an unen lightened attitude on the part of em ployer and employe." "The employer, for his part, has fostered long houra, low wage and cramped quarters. The employe. meanwhile, has abused his employ ment in a manner that would not be tolerated in any other Industry." This cold statement explains Itself as far as the operating of the ships goes. In another sentence, the com mission sounds a warning to Amer ican labor and capital whose Joint efforts build ships. The report rec ommends that: 'Where the construction differen tial (difference between foreign and American cost) is more than 0 per cent," "operators be permitted to build abroad ..." The new appointee to the Job of director of air commerce (which Isn't the subject of a public announcement at this writing) will be. according to certain gentlemen accredited with offering 30 to 1 to back his chances, Dennis Mulligan. Mr. Mulligan, president solicitor of the bureau, came In with Eugene Vldal. Mr. Vidal went out on the wings of the tornado, or shortly there after, stirred up by the testimony before the aub-commlttee on aircraft Investigation which charged Mr. Vl dal with sacrificing safety to econ omy. His successor, Fred Fagg. Is leaving for Northwestern university to take a very good Job as dean of the school of cominerce. Mr. Mulligan, who la about to take over, according to the low-downers, like Mr. Vldal was a West Point foot ball captain. He la an ex-avlator and a lawyer. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the flies of the Mall Tribune 10 and 30 years ago. TEN YFARS A(iO TODAY November ln, 1037. School budget is Increased 7.6 mllla over last year. Weeks & Orr toyland to open for Christmas business. Aviation rules urged by Col. Lind bergh. Stores and offices to be closed to- YOUR. " Pin a medal on Father the best 2 year job he , say tht :ld row taverj UT I can't take all credit!" says Father Time. "Pin a few medals on National Distillers, too! They gave me a fine prod uct to work on. They never hurried me ... let me work at leisure for two solid years to make Town Tavern smoother, mellower, finer n Straight - ifc'ltvMiw' w i s'M'tww . .4. ...mum 'v mm lPUf rwm' morrow to oelsbrats Artnlatlca Day. Cloudy and oool 1 the weatlwr outlook. Annual drawing for atata auto II oenae numbera to ba held by the secretary of state tomorrow. Holiday spirit prevail aa record crowd plana to attend Armistice Day celebration. TWENTY YEARS AOO TOIIAY November 10, 1017. (It waa Saturday.) Oklahoma Klanamen chase I.W.WJ from oil fields. Germans reach Plave river on Ital ian front. Retreat halted. President Wilson In Buffalo speech demands "full support of union Isbor to wtn the war." Ninety-six percent of the farmers'of Jsckson county sign Hoofer pledge cards. Russians battle In the streets of Petrograd. Leon Hasklns back from duck hunt ing trip empty-handed. Carl Y. Tengwald, en route to Join the army at San Antonio, stops for brief visit. Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS iJOTE this headline: il "President Considers New Spending Program." It is EXTREMELY SIGNIFICANT. BUSINESS ."frightened. Exactly why, nobody knows. But FUN DAMENTALLY business men are ner vous because for years this country 1 has been spending more than It has : been taking In. Every business man I knows that when this goes on about I so long something unpleasant hap pens. Because of this nervous apprehen sion, which prevents normal expan sion, business ha been slipping re cently. The slipping has caused a lot of worry. The btg question Is WHAT TO DO ' ABOUT IT? j THE easy thing4 to do, of course, ; la to borrow more and spend j more. That will give business another j shot In the arm. But the easy thing , to do isn't always the best thing to do. Business became frightened because ', we have been spending too much along with & lot of other things. ! Whether business will be reassured by i STILL MORE SPENDING Is open to grave doubts. ANOTHER striking headline: "Jap anese Seise all Shanghai." The Chinese army retreats during the night to new positions defending Nanking, the capital city, and leaves China's largest city and principal port OUIDE TO OOOO LIQUORS keeper the In the hands of the Invaders. WHEN i good Utile man fights a good big man, them U usually only one possible result. China Isn't little from tha standpoint of Haa or numbers, but she Isn't very big from the standpoint of modern fighting power. ANOTHER headline, which la re lated to the first: "Best Jap Troops on Soviet Border. Russia and Nippon Believed on Threshold of Dlplomstic Break." Connect this headline with the on a few days ago telling of the ALLI ANCE AGAINST COMMUNISM JUat formed by Italy, Germany and Japan. And keep your eye on Russia. Si - CELEBRATE ARMISTICE DAY IN MEDFORD! Medford Legionnaires have ar ranged a swell program for YOU tomorrow . . . Parade, football game, stunts and danclngl You owe It to yourself and to the Legionnalrea to COME TO MED FORD and celebrate . . . Take my word for It . , . you'll have a wonderful ttmel You are Invited to make the Rex your headquar ters. HY FRAGER. Remember! We Feature DELICIOUS DINNERS 50c I j stjnM '.EpSfC-Hl pal lime for ever did"