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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1937)
-MEWflRP UfATL TRTBWE, MEDFORD, OREGON", SUNDAY,' yOVErBER 13. 1937 ,TRI2UNE "Everyo-D. lo South.ra Oreaea wU th. Mall Trlbtua." Dallr Kie.pt Saturday. Published by Il-!t ! N. Tir 81. Phnii. tl ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. ERNEST R. OILBTRAPt Manae.r. Ao Indspandsnt N.wapapar. Entarad eaconu-claa, rnatt.r at Med. lord, Oreion. unflsr Act of March . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Sy Moll In Advanc.i Dallr! oil monlb By Cur'rler, In Advanc. Msdford. Ah land, Jick.oavtlls. Contra! Point. Phoenix, Tolont, Oold Hill end on , highways: . Dolly, on. ysar Dally, six monlho , Dally, ono month All torma cash In advanca. Official Paper of tbo City f Medford. - Official Paper ol Jarkaoo County. UEMIIER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tht Aaioclatod Proaa la aiclutlvaly an tltlad to tho uaa for publication of all aiwi dlspslchss credited to It or oth.r wlia cradltad to Ihla paper, and alao to tbe local newa published herein. All rlshts for publication of epeclal dUpatchee herein are alao r.aervsd. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertlalnls Repreaentatlraa Offices In New Tork, Chlce to, Detroit. San rranclaco, Loa Anrelea, Seattle. Tort, land, SI. T.oula,' Allenla, Vancouver. B.C. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. MBnv nt thn womenfolks were about Armistice Day, In their funny (all hats, laughing at the overseas caps, worn by the veterans of the Orcat War. e e e 8no now mantles the high hills, and presents a pretty picture. If the woodshed la not empty. Lovers of the outdoors with ekile will soon be falling down hill, after the man ner of Jack As JUL e e The football men of Old Medford gave notice Frl. they will be tromp ed on no more by the foe. The "Black Tornado" regained some of Kb tornsdlo qualities, and ripped accordingly. The dirts' Drum corps, with 6 drum majorettes, tooted and drummed their prettiest. e e e The Dubb Watson boy ran down to Frisco last week wltn nis ioi. to see Uncle Dan off for Honolulu. e a e "J. Kort HsU, the fretting horti culturist, has been rusticating t lakevlew the past ten days, which accounts for his disappearance from these parts. a e A breath-taking beauty from the south was here the 1st of the week. A number of local dudes hsd their breath took, and put back, In plenty of time. She advised one squire, he was not conscious of her beauty. Owing to his )uth, he was tooled by this first degree perjury. e e A copious rain fell Wed. eve. and waa beneficial alike for plowing and duck hunting. a a a Atty O. Newbury and Del 3tchel traduced the Democratic party, In earshot of O. John Patton Thurs. The ton of old Erin deigned to make reply, but did stats such vitupera tion gave him the giggles. e e e Motorcyclist are active again, with the weaker aex riding on the rear seat, as they hurtle through the crisp and bracing air. Hermy Offenbacher of the Apple gate, ahook the festive hoof at J'vllle Wed: night. He now has a modem innovation In his house. e e e Quite a few have caught colds. It's a question whether the cltlren oi the cold did the apprehending. e e e Hot tamale. country sausage, ana turkevs are the leading eating Items among those who rare aught about their heft. eta Immett Nealon of the O. Pt dlst. who nearly whacked off a finger, with a hay knife, It now able to point the msimed digit at Wall St. occaaalonally while making a speech. e a e Hall fell the first of the week. It hit nothing but the ground and roofs, and came when the chickens were sleeping. e e e Cowmen report the grass on the range, looks better than the Baptist church lawn. a a e t,udo Orleve of Prospect and Dewy Hill, the ace hire man, fro licked Irt the city Thurs. e Old Oregon grsds, on the eve of their alma mater's grid tsngle wltn Csllf.,'were firm but fslterlng. snd unable to get the rubber band off their bankrolls. 1 Far In Alma Mater SEATTLE. (UP) Jean Hothen hoefer. 30-year-o'd aenlor In home economic at the University of Wash ington, traveled 7000 miles across the Pacific ocean so that she might at tend the Institution from which her mother was graduated. Her home wss originally In Manila. P. I. Medfo: Tea In Ceylon Hitter COLOMBO (UP) It Is difficult to get a decent cup of tea In the trains of Ceylon, the home of tea. That la the complaint with whlcn H. C. N. Yate. chairman of the Dimbulla Planters' association, con founded the tea propaganda board meeting here to decide on means to pnpinpr.y- the beverage through- cut m KMia. "Don't Fire 'Em, Kill 'Em" JOSEF STALIN emerged the of silence to make a public us an attempt to explain the tions during the last year. It is have died in the official weeding out of alleged traitors to the communist regime. "Leaders come and go," declared Stalin, "while the people remain. Therefore one must know how to value the trust of the people. "In general one should say of our leaders that, unfortunate ly, they did not' always understand to what height they had been raised by history under conditions of the Soviet system, and they have not always understood that to be a leader of economy in our conditions is a great honor and is to be graced with great trust on the part of the working class and on the part of tbe people." The speech may have been awkwardly translated, but the gist of it is plain. By "leaders" he evidently means subordi nates. In a democracy, officials who fail to understand their honor and responsibility to the of office. In Russia they are executed, not by the people, but by other leaders or officials who claim the right to do it. Somehow, we prefer our own treatment, No Longer a King THE plague of greatness, as i tn Vip ill.nrlvisprl. Thn that now. When Edward was king, it A constitutional king is not supposed to think for himself, but merely to go through the motions of reigning and do what his prime minister tells him and say what he is expected to Bay. That very training "in the constitutional tradition of his father'' which Edward mentioned in his abdication speech, tended to disqualify him for independent judgment of men and affairs. On two or three occasions when he undertook to act alone on important matters he was promptly suppressed. His chief effort in that direction cost him Once adrift, Edward faced been prepared, where he had to make his own choice of advisers and courses of action. In spite of his intelligence and good intent, he has mado serious mistakes. In the present case it was folly for him to make his German trip and let himself be tagged as pro-Nazi on the eve of his trip to America.' On'the top of that, in a tour intended to show his interest in the humbler classes of society, it was folly for him to have as his guide and manager a man regarded as an enemy of American labor. It did not help, either, in a trip for such a purpose, to invite so much- attention to his lavish mode of travel and his wife's elaborate wardrobe, in some 75 trunks. Edward, if sincere, as he probably is, in his professed desire for human service, must learn to find his way around for him self before he can accomplish much. R. S. Here and There WE shall never understand Europeans, nor will they under stand us. The. vast gap between our two civilizations appears when you consider the matter of whistling. With us, as with the birds, it pression of personal happiness at a theater or a ball game, it We whistle also to call a friend, But among those benighted means the opposite. In a crowd at an individual anywhere is an it means contemptuous disapproval. Then there is the opposite of the whistle, which is the hiss. We hiss at people or actions that we scorn. In a theater we may hiss tho villain or any performer whose art is bad enough. But over in l'aris or Rome you eabmnn to invite his attention, or he hisses at you with the same friendly purpose. They are great hissers on tho Continent, out-hissing a snake or a goose without any hostile intent at all. The natural result is a great deal of misunderstanding. American travelers get mad when they're hissed at and Ameri can athletes or actors abroad hear a volley of whistles though it means they're rotten. And when we whistle at a visiting statesman to show our naive enthusiasm for him it's a diplomatic incident or a casus belli. Maybe there should be an international conference to adopt a uniform code. MM SEES END WASHINGTON. Not. IS (API Senator Charles McNsry of Orriton noted today s "decided slump in the president's prestige snd popu larity sine ths election last yesr.' He predicted democratic congress men would be "less Inclined to lot low White House dictation" snd would "give more time to the study and consideration of Issues." In the apeclsl session opening Monday. Republican senstors, the minority lender ssld. prohsbly would oppose giving the president greater author Ity to reorganise the government, and would cooperate In "a, business like modification" of revenue Isws. 4 llov Mii.lilsn Has "IVrfrrt Pitch" OLIVET, Mich. (API Instructors st Tanglewood farm, s school nesr here, have enrolled l 10-year old "mualclan with perfect pitch " He is Don Howe, one of J children who attend the school. Instructors say the boy cen Identity every chord struck on a. piano In sn ad joining room, csn nsme accurately every minor of major chord, and add (lata and aharpa to his speci fications. He haa had only on. year of piano instruction. Between November. 10:13 and De cember, 193" nesrly 3ia.0O0.OO0 in federal government funds was spent for the construction and Improve ment of r-crrallon area. In tne fanou, auiaa. other day from ieven month, speech which might be taken horrible wave of political execu laid that nearly 1,200 Russians people are eventually voted out Shakespeare probably remarked, Duke of Windsor must realize wasn't so much of a problem. his throne. a world for which he had not is a friendly salute or an ex and satisfaction. In a crowd expresses boisterous approval. or a cab. Europeans human whistling it is a bronx cheer. To whistle insult. At the theater or opera hiss at an acquaitance or a think they're swell when they BALK AT $25 PER SALEM. Nov. IS. (API Mild crlt iciam was directed at the national democratic committee's proposal to take over all Jackson day dinners and charge $36 a plate, at a meet ing of the Marlon County Demo cratic society here last night. John Marshall, county democratic chairman, aatd he didn't believe the plan would prove a success, "The cost of the Jackson day din ners should not be too high to bar the poor man," Marshall said. Elton Watkins. Portland, was the principal speaker. 'PowHtn LlTfs In Oarage CLEVKI.AND. (UP) A baoy 'pos sum made Its home In the garage of Mrs. Max Teltelbaum. 'Possums never have been seen In the neighborhood. Mrs. Teltelbaum said, but sne be lieved the "Barage-dweller" may have been attracted by the food she sup plies for birds and squirrels. Radio Reduces Crime BELLEVILLE. 111. (UP) Police be lieve they have found the best weap on against crime In Belleville. Two weeks after installation of a new police radio system crime was reduced to almost nothing. Most serious of fense wss thelt of a blcvcls. C. vin time Tor Too Lite to C!as Uf afcia i 140 p. m. Personal Health Service By William Signed letteri pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dUeaM dlagnoflls or treatment, will be antmerrd by Dr. Brady If a aumped Mlf addreued envelope U enclosed. Letteri should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answeted. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Cam I no, Beverly, Calif. DERMATITIS OR INFLAMMATION OF SKIN ALL SAME ECZEMA Eczema, called also tetter and salt rheum, means literally to boll out. It Is a akin Inflammation charac terized by redness, Itching, formation of papules, vesi cles, which later become crust or scales, and by weeping or wat- . :'isCT f ror many years fwT,, the problem of ait i inguianing eczema from der- HLfc ' matltia puzzled I X L A had a happy JafjfffffffffffffJXiMBU number of em inent authorities a child-like question: "What do you mean dermatitis?" Each and every one of them took pity on my amazing Ignorance and launched Into an earn est endeavor to enlighten me Each and every one waa still floundering when I left him muttering In his beard. I came to the conclusion ' But not so easily aa this would Im ply. You see, the common name, salt rheum at least It was formerly the popular name for eczema means wat ery discharge from tho Inflamed sur face or rather salt water, that Is, ser um, which, of course, Is salty Orig inal meaning of the term waa watery discharge or flow from mucous mem branes especially from the eyes and nose, hence "a cold, catarrh." Some eminent dermatologists have attempt ed to define eczema as "catarrhal In flammation of the skin originating without apparent external Irritation and characterized earlier or later by serious exudntlon," that Is, weeping. This definition purport to distin guish eczema from dermatitis. Der matltla. It seems, la skin Inflamma tion which la apparently or presum ably caused by some external Irritant, such aa poison Ivy, primrose, seaweed, turpentine, orthaform. metol, anllln. croton oil, cowhnge, arsenic dyes and other dyes used for furs. - Eventually I arrived at the conclus ion that there is no partlcuUr ad vantage In trying to llsttngulsh ec zema from dermatitis. From a survey of the latest medical literature I In fer that If you have $1.50 It la ec zema, whereas if you have 85.00 It Is more likely dermatitis. Whatever It Is tlled eczema, tetter, salt rheum or dermatitis, It Is evidently not a specific disease for which a particu lar remedy Is applicable, but rather -QCMclntyre NEW YORK, Nov. 13. The major ity of our travel remembrances are of hotels. Most of my life has been spent in thc,m. My father wss a ho tel proprietor, I was once a night clerk and later a hotel press agent. To this dny I annex a tingle In finding lodgings In a strange Inn. On the stage "Grand Hotel," for example in the movies and In literature, ao m e of the most ex citing plots have been batched In hotels. I never register at a hotel that I do not feel that somewhere behind the scenes a lively drama Is brewing. Every 34 hours In a big city hotel there la material for a dozen news paper columns, plots for a novel or so and the making of a play. I re call one bit of high voltage drama at a hotel I was publicizing end one which a humane medical exam iner saved from the headlines. She was a beautiful woman of notable ancestry wbo hsd married out of her clsw. To a bounder who taught her to drink and use drugs. Deserted, she came to our hotel, pis toled herself, and her hand clenched a scrawl to her husband: "I die cursing you I" There are Innumerable hotels that geyser Jeta of pleasant rememberings for me. That famed St. Nlcl.olas of Cincinnati days a bandbox of an Inn that fairly drenched the patrons with cut fflAss hixtirv. Rvcn 9.1 vmm ago Its employes changed to evening ail. at sundown. Elevators were sprayed with a delicate scent every few hours and the operators wore buckled knee pants and silk stock ings, the clerks full evening drew. Always on the breakfast plate a red rose, glistening with dew. Then the old Planters In St. Louis, with Tony Fault's restaurant hard by. Through the Planter's spacious lobby roamM the wlde-hatted, high booted cattle dealers from all points. Men who drank whiskey neat, smoked 50-cent cigars while In the city and beetowed ailver dollar tins. Some how f asexvlste the Planter's with the venerable St. Charles In New Or leans In whop rambling dining room with looped hangings, I enjoyed a memotsble breakfast a fare of gol den buckwheat cakes, scrambled eggs. auMge cakes and cinnamon-sprinkled apple rings and coffee. tKe like of which I have rarely tasted before or since. For 13 yeara resided as ft paying patron at the Rita Carlton In New York, and as a bouquet for Its man aging director, Albert Keller. I can sdd that not once In thst long pe riod was t Justified in making a single complaint. So attached tw It had I become that It was a long time before I could p!s It without a tru -and to Mp tn now snd Uiea u lUa ettu back tout ajiui. Brady, M D. tha reaction of the skin to soma ex ternal Irritant, some chemical, drug, acid, lye, soap, paint, solvent, dye, or to frequent wetting of the hands with hot or cold water In some occupa tions; or to some irritant arising from an abnormal condition in tha body. For example, a common cause of ec zema In Infants la excess of carbohy dratestarch, dextrose dextrt-maltose or other sugar in the ready-prepared food which "agrees" altho It does not properly nourish. The original name, salt rheum, and the conception still current, that ec zema Is "catarrhal" Inflammation of the skin, Indicate that the trouble was once attributed to cold. At that, It would be Just as sensible to dis miss a dimwit patient with the as surance that his eczema or dermatitis is Just a "cold" he has caught In tha skin aa It la to string along the vie tlm of a respiratory infection that way as plenty of popular practltlon era do. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Weak Women Three slater and all suffer about the some for a day or two each month. It often keeps me in bed and my salary stops then of course? (H S. Q.) Answer Neglected physical educa tion In school. Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for mori ograph on Menstruation. Allergy Please Inform me what medicine you mentioned that persona subject to allergy can take? (PRJ.) Answer Calcium lactate, five grain tablets, two tablets three tlmea a day after food for period of six or eight weeks Optimal ration of vitamin D dally. Five-grain capsules of whole pancreas take four or five capsules after meals for a few days when an attack is on. Hair My hair la falling badly. Does cut ting the hair close to the scalp help any? (C.T.R.) Answer Cutting never affects growth of hair. Bend stamped envel ope bearing your address for mono graph "Care of Hair and Control of Dandruff." Copyright 1937, John F. Dille Co. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 265 El Cam I no. Beverly Hills. Calif. t also love the rambling old Rltz In Paris, with its Inside garden, where fountains rise and fall and patches of flower are slit by col gravel walks. I like the Place Ven dome side concierge, with his wisp of imperial, so obelsant you'd never suspect he was one of the large stockholders. And Oliver, the head waiter .whose snaw white chin whis kers are waxed and curled precisely like a dapper mustache. Hotels, ho telslike the Imposing and restful Breakers at Palm Beach, the Core nado at Coronado Beach, the old tlmey but comfortable United States at Saratoga, the colorful bar at the Regla tn Mexico City, the view of Boul Mich from the old Congress In Chicago, and the mint Julep at the Seelback In Louisville. The most comfortAhi Vi "slept In was at The Dome in Co- ana mere was tbar Jousty waterfront hotel In Antwerp the Queen from whose windows I watched the long line of carters driv ing their Berlbboned Pereherons with one line, all night. The Adlon in Berlin and the gold statue of the ex Kalser. And the Kalserln Augustine Victoria at Weimar, where the man ager greeted vou at the rtn..i- aa room service waiter, and often an swerer, tne can for a bellboy. But the highlight of hotels to me waa at the Amstel in Amsterdam, where at 10 o'clock niht- r cd In a soft light as bright as day me arming oarges, and Dutch fami lies aboard, along the canals while I ate a supper featuring almost coal black pumpernickel, chilled goat's milk In a stein and imva vnriotijs. Ar the tastiest cheese I ever come upon. There's Interest, to, around the Sa voy tn London, which waa the origi nal of Arnold Bennett's great novel. imperial Hotel. Especially the hesd bellbOV In frock Ci-WIt lnrl laHr.enl.,1 trousers. And Kitty and Collie, the (Copyright. 1937. McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) E PROVIDENCE. R. I.. Not. IS (API Dr. Ray Lvmsn Wilbur, ores- Idem of Stanford university. Mid "enemies"' of Herbert Hoover sre spread ln(t report, he seeks the 140 1 Republlran nomination for presi dent. "These enemies." Dr. Wilbur ssld In an Interview at the dinner ol the Assoclstlon of Amerlrsn Univer sities here lsst night, "sre resorting to thetr old tactics of charging Mr Hoover with seUlAhness. He declared the purpose wss to Injure Mr. Hoover's Influence as a Republican leader. Frtaco flutter SACRAMENTO. Nor. 13. (API Churning cream butterfat: first grade, 40c; second grade, 40c. SAN rRANClSCO, Not. IS. (AP USDAI BITTSR: score 81, SSc; 8. JS'aC. CloMn time for Too UK to Clas uti Ada u 1.90 p. m. Behind Washington Headlines By H. R. Baukhage Copyright 1937. by Tbe North American News paper Alliance, Inc. (Continued from Page One) ees accept the Japanese terms In ad vance. Japan may be broke, but she certainly doesn't know It yet. If the administration doesn't get any better cooperation out of bus iness than It haa out of nature, there never will be a balanced budget. Even Secretary Wallace apparent ly feels that the abundant life Is getting a little too abundant. There was wry humor behind his remark that he was glad that the bureau of agricultural economics bad only one more month to put out crop esti mates. And well. he might be concerned for the farm rellel program, because the bountiful yields of corn and wheat as well as cotton are shaping up toward gargantuan proportions. Private estlrnates in the south, made before the last cotton crop of ficial estimate was Issued, Indicated that at least seven million bales would go Into government loans. If the government estimate la correct. It may mean another million -bales will be added to this category. This would mean (at a loan value of $45 per bale) that $360,000,000 of federal funds would be tied up tor an indefinite period In loans on cot ton. -4 Communications Give Local Trapper the Bounties To the editor: I see tn your paper the 1038 Jackson County budget com mittee are going to put government hunters In this county and take off the bounty on wild oats and coyotes, which I think is unfair. Each trapper or hunter must obtain a $3 license before he can catch or kill one var mint. And If $3 is not enough for V. Hopkins or any government hunter why not raise the bounty and let everyone receive the bounty. What can two hunters do In Jack son County? We have trappers and hunters all over Jackson County now that are Just as good or better than any Jackson County committee will employ. Let the trappers here have the benefits of the bounty they are the ones that deserve it. If the Fed eral hunters want to hunt for the bounty. OK. These men that are having their sheep or turkevs killed get in touch with the trappers of the county and take down their "no hunting" or trespassing signs from their farms, and let the troppers trap and I think they will get the coyotes caught. The stockmen and poultry raisers who think the coyotes are more num erous .than in a decade, can they prove It? Ask the deer hunters bow many coyotes they have seen this year compared with other years. I have hunted for deer this year and never saw a coyote. Other years I have seen several. I am sure there are fewer coyotes now than there have been for years. Let the trapper have the benefits of the bounty and lets hesr from othersl R. H. Sims Medford, November 13 Ye Poets Corner The Happy Hunting nrounds. Sometime before so very long,' 111 have to cross the Range And settle in a country which To me Is new and strange. But I hsve hesrd about a plsce Where gsme galore- abounds: And that'a where I II be heading for The Happy Hunting Orounds. I've often met with kindly folk Who firmly claim to know The best spots In Hereafter-land Tot everyone to go. I've pondered csrefully their dope, Then leld It on a shelf. Because they always failed to show More thsn I know myself. Each group of these well-meaning guides Upholds a favored road Which, more direct than others, lesds To some Divine abode. But when I've begged for evidence. I've found It was no use: With deep regret I'm forced to state They could no proof produce. These fsmous Happy Hunting Grounds May. too, be Just a tale: But millions who have hesded there Hsve surely left a trail. Millions of our Red brothers, some Of whom were friends of mine, Hsve started for those charming grounds Where hunting la so fine. So when I get across the Rsnge, First thing I aim to do. Will be to find that beaten trail And follow It right through. ror If there'a auch a country It'a The place where 1 belong And several million pioneers Could hardly all be wrong. J. C. REYNOLDS. Mmly -or-Pav Plan Proposed PITTSBURGH l API Lasy student, sho fall to complete high fchool within four years should be cnarg ed tuition for additional Instruc tion. Itv the opinion of Myrtle S. Wylle. Allegheny high school teacher. Such an arrangement, ahe estimates, would save 140.000 annually to teachers In Pittsburgh alone. Dally average sales of vsrlety stores In the United States for Sep tember were about two percent about thoee of P',ptemer. 1936. and higher than for any corresponding moQUl since Uit. NEXT FEW WEEKS EYED AS CRITICAL December Watched As Key To 1938 Auto Sales Vol umeHope Is Held For Record Production Year. By Don Pryor (U. P. Staff Correspondent.) DETROIT. (UP) The next few weeks will be critical ones for the automobile industry as It surges to ward the peak of tta long upward climb to the remembered glories of 1929. Two Immense question-marks face sales managers and other executives as they grope for a clear vision of the road Just ahead. They are: 1. What will happen on the labor front? 3. What la tha retail market going to do? These questions are of equal im portance; each la an unknown quan tity; and each affects all major pro ducers. The paralyzing strikes which broke out about this time laat year snd developed Into the most dramatic dis play of sit-down tactics this co'jmtry haa seen still are remembered with dread. And new unrest bobs up con tinually with unpredictable results. Big 3 Plagued. Today Ford, General Motors and Chrysler the "big three" all are facing labor situations which, while not Immediately menacing, pose im portant problems for executives plagued by rising costs and Increas ing market resistance. General Motora and Chrysler both have contracts with the United Auto mobile Workers' union, establishing procedure for collective bargaining and setting standards for seniority and other conditions of work. But since early last summer union offi cials have been bargaining with Gen eral Motors over demands for re vision of Its contract, and In recent weeks relations between the union and Chrysler corporation have be come noticeably cool. Henry Ford has remained stead fastly aloof from all contact with the U.A.W.A. and has taken no pains to hide his resentment against and op position to all attempts to unionize his workers. To bring him Into the fold of manufacturers with which it has contracts, the union currently is expending a large share of its en ergy and money tn a natlon-wldc campaign directed at Ford's approxi mately 140.000 employes. Future Uncertain. This campaign has met repeated set-backs since union officials pre dicted last spring that Ford would "have his name on a contract by Christmas." And that brings us to the second question facing the Industry today: What is the retail market going to do? Nobody seems to know. But one thing is obvious every manufacturer la geared for the biggest selling year In history, but decidedly" uncertain about Its coming. Hopes for a record year are well founded. According to the A.M.A.. October factory sales were estimated at 340.920 unite, an Increase of 94 percent over September and 48 per cent over October of last year. The first 10 months of this year showed sales "of 4.295,933 units, compared with 3.691,517 for the same period of 1936. If these figures told the whole story, sales managers' worrlea would be over. But . . . Rumors have been flying thick and fast through this automotive center recently and sales departments are unusually tight-lipped. But the fact that orders for 1938 models have not yet come up to expectations is well known, and all producers arc stttlng on the edges of their chairs to see what December brings. Mts Chlorine Death DUNCAN, Okls. (UP) A group Ot boys who pulled hose connections loose from tanks near the city stor age depot here escaped death by a nsrrow margin, according to Chiei of Police C. M. Taylor. Taylor said the lines connected to tanks ot chlorine gas used In the treatment of sewage. Chlorine gas la an acrid, suffocating gas used in warfare. Autos Take Bird Toll LEBANON Mn TTP, inn.-,,. mately 700.000 birds are killed an nually by automobiles on the paved ways of Missouri, according to an estimate by O. E. Moore, editor of the Bluebird, official publication of tne Audubon Society of Missouri. DO YOU SUFFER FROM CHRONIC COUGH? 7i No lonrer need vnu j .rn, irmriii, UirtTI ITOn. I nillS Will five jou pmltlre relief from this ailment. Whv not relieve yourself of thU dlatreAhi mwmx t.i. C. II. Chan tftlm no harmful drugs or poltn It li as safe the food you eat. Why Continue To Suffer non't suffer needlessly any longer take advantage of nature', pure Herbs which God put In the ground for cur nse to remedv ailments nf mankind. No matter ohst jour Ills msy be. dont give up hone Vou msy ,.ve yourself the pains and epeme of an operation' l0 jou hate Gas. Constipation, stomach Trouble. Rheumatism Hv leier. Prostste Trouble, I'lrers. Children's Bed Wettlni, o.n stones. Hun twmn Condition. lnua Trouble. Asthms. Influenza remale Trouble. Piles. Chronic Coofh. Hlh Blood Pressure. Arthritis, Colitis. Servonsneaa. Appendicitis. Tonsllltls. Ertema. Heart. Liver Bladder Kidneys, Lilnrs. Blood, I Unary Murders. Tree consultation. CHAN & CHAN CHINESE MEDICINE CO. Open 10 to p. m. Saturday till I p. m. fnes. and Thnrs. in-u a. m. Clowd Sunday. sjj tKiT MMN iT. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from tha files of tha Mall Tribune 10 and to years go. ' TEN YEARS AGO TODAT November 14, 192T (It waa Monday) Sen. Borah calls on Republican party to ceasa "straddling Prohib ition Issue", Pairing of Blxth street from Oak dala to Main street to start Monday. Work of widening local airport starts. Medford high to play Corrallla bera next Saturday. Col. Lindbergh and Ruth Elder, filers, guests of President at White House luncheon. Work starts on excavation at Sixth and Holly streets, and rumor Med ford will have new movie theater. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 14, 1917 (It was Wednes-lsy) Vslley irrigation survey to be com pleted soon. German drive along Plsv. river . defeated by Italians. Chaos reigns In many Russian cities. Major E. E Kelly ordered to France. Thursday la final dsy for cltltens to pay paving assessments. Poor local response to Y. M.-O. A. drive. NO WAR VOTE BY BILLINGS. Mont., NOV. 13. (AP) Senator Burton K. Wheeler (D.. Mont.), said America faced an in creasing threat of war and declared he would not vote for war "though I am hanged in effigy and have all those other things done to me that are done In times of war hysteria." "Before we go into another war, before congress votes for war, I want to see It go to a vote of tbe moth ers of this country and those who will have to do the fighting In the trenches," Senator Wheeler told a, non-polltlcal meeting. All advertisements, with certain exceptions', in the dally newspapers and magazines of Lima. Peru, will be aubjeet to an ad valorem tax of 10 percent under a law recently enacted. The American naval air force, which for years has been rated tha finest in the world. Is now com prised of 1,027 modern planes. Some 762 additional planes have been ordered. urge is the F-a-s-t-e-s-t Milker Ever Builtl FASTEST on tha Cow the exclusive "tug" action gets the milk fasti FASTEST to Handl- fsst putting it on the cow and taking it off! FASTEST to Empty rigid pail handle permita quick easy emptying I FASTEST to Clean only 4 inches of rubber instead of 4 feet fewer parts solid Stainless Steel Pail! LESS STRIPPING! PimtVrittor Drop In I ECONOMY SEED & FEED CO. 317 W. 6th. phone 95S AUTHORIZED SURGE DEALER .rrr fMi. ... " rnronic