PAGE NINE
RELIEF OE
FARMER JAPANESE YIELD
I SMITH COMPANY ROW
agreed In principle to his arbitration
plan In the Smith Wood Products
company dispute here.
He will return next week tor sign
ing of agreement.
The plan provides for a department
ot labor arbitrator to decide on the
return and union status of C.I.O.
workers now on atrlke. The mill la
operating under an exclusive agree
ment with the A-P.L.
MEDIATION CHAIRMAN
IS CLAIMED BY DEATH
WA8HINOTON. IVc. .?. ( API -Jm.
W. Carmalt. chnlrmon nt h n
ilonal mKllation board. dli at hi
home today after an tllnaa of mv
ral veeka.
Carmalt ;id umd on tha board
iln 1034. Hl public arvif prior
to that tlma lneludd two yeerR'
Job aa counal to the federal co-ordl-naror
of transportation and several
yeara aa chief examiner of the Inter
state commerce eommlMlon. ,
Poeteu I'awes.
PORTLAND, Dec. 3. (aJ) Mary
AJetha Woodward. 64, co-winner of
the 1M9 International poetry con
test of the American section of the
Poetry Society of Great Britain. did
yesterday. "To Omar Khayyam" waa
her winning poem.
WILL BE ARBITRATED
MARSHFIELD. Dec. 3. (AP) E
MAJOR NECESSITY
TO.U. S.
P. Marsh, federal labor conciliator.
Four-fifths of the productive forest
area of (ha United 6tte la privately
owned.
I said before leaving for San Francisco
I
CHIEF'S PROTEST
Viife VjtaA -ltatf-i-'-
(Continued trom Page One.).
MEDFORP MATL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREfiOX. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1937.
i
s
that A.F.U and CIO. leaders had
(Continued trom Ps One.)
.tlon. all the t of thle balancing
ll easy."
Xoted Figures Present.
On the platform. In addition to
Whit, were alien national flguree aa
Secretary of Labor Perkina, KrV
chairman Jeaae H. Jonea and Gov
ernor Prank Murphy of Michigan.
LaGuardla. aquat. excitable ana
politically unorthodox a friend end
co-worker on some mattera In tne
past, with the LaPollettea of Wis
consin was disclosed only Wednea
day to have abandoned hie last theo
retical tie with the Republican party.
He had reglatered formally about a
month ago. It turned out. with tne
American labor party, bringing spec
ulatlon he might have a third party
national movement In mind.
. His subject assignment at tne
dinner was "the shape of things to
come." and he said In response that
what Interested him most waa "what's
going to come from Washington?"
"The way to get out of our pres
ent troubles Is to face the facts.
Nothing Is going to be balanced ao
lone aa we have eight to ten mil
lion people unemployed through no
fault of their own.
Farmer Is First.
"First attention muat be given the
American farmer. He ha been gat
ting a raw deal" here he ahouted
and beat his hands together
"through nearly all the growth ot
this country.
"We've established standards ot
living , so beautifully described by
Mr. Gilford (Walter Olfford of tne
American Telephone and Telegrapn
opmpany. who prevloualy had de
livered a defense of capitalism)
and our standards were always estab
lished through the tariff."
"The farmer buys in a protected
market, but when it comes time
for him to sell his stuff, he must
sail In the world market.
"Unless we create our own market
In this country, people will aufter
and. Mr. Olfford. people won't be
able to use the telephone, except
maybe to call up the relief bureau."
Olfford had asserted that Ameri
cans had been missing "the mam
road to success" recently by looking
to foreign countries "for methods to
copy," which he declared would land
us "where they are with lower ma
terial well being than we have now."
System Misnamed.
He said the capVallst system might
be called more properly "the worker
and consumer system."
"Capital In the form of an organi
zation of people with able manage
ment and with a purpose, and witn
the tools, equipment and matenaia
to carry it out," he aald, "la the
basis of the well-being of the past
and the hope of the future."
Prof. Felix Frankfurter of the Har
vard law school envisioned greater
governmental control of private in
dustry In the future, calling self-interest
the "dynamo of our economic
system," he declared that "vanoua
forms of collaborative enterprise, in.
eluding the largest club to which we
all belong, namely tne government,
must step in. first to rein up self
interest where It la doing harm, and
secondly, to perform those tasks of
mutual aid which must be done
communally."
over protest of American and other
officiate and there waa tension In the
settlement.
I stood within a short distance of
the explosion. The Japanese troops,
convoyed by tanks and with air
planes overhead, broke for ahelter.
Oalnlng sidewalks, excitedly they
peered at upper stories of buildings
cn both sides of the street as It ex
pecting further volleys.
Thousands of Japanese civilians
lined the street, waving flags, dis
playing bannera, and shouting "Ban
sal." horrayl
The crlea turned to screams as the
grenade buret.
Chinese and Japanese alike scat
tered. Hardly had the excitement begun
to aubslde when the patriotic Chi
nese hurled himself Into the street
near me, falling In a mangled pulp
Into a barbed wire barricade.
Then a British lawyer, E. T. Malt-
land, formerly advocate of the
Shanghai municipal police, added to
the tension by breaking the staff
of a Japanese flag across his knee
Japaneae troops, he aald. molested
him. British police took him under
guard.
American Punched
An American businessman. Vincent
Read, was Injured In the face by a
group of Japanese officers. They
punched him because he refused to
move.
The entire city waa dangerously
tense tonight.
Dictator Threat
Visioned By Kerr
PORTLAND, Dee. 8. (AP) A dic
tatorship of Intimidation and vio
lence threatens American liberty. Dr.
W. J. Kerr, former chancellor ot
higher education, told the Progree
alve Businessmen's club yesterday.
"la It because V group of men are
trying to better their condition'"
Dr. Kerr said. "No." It Is that certain
men may gain power."
The ex-presldent of Oregon State
college aald dictatorships had given
the people confidence In Italy and
Oermany. but had deatroyed liberty
and a free press.
ELYHIA. O. (UP) When police
found prisoner with a bar of eoep
wrapped in a towel In such a way
u to make an effective blackjack,
deputies replaced county Jail sup
plies of bar soap with liquid soap.
TO GOLFING BABE
NEW YORK. Dec. 3. (API The
New York Sun quoted Bnbe Ruth
today aa saying he had beaten John
Montague several timea on various
golf courses In recent weeks.
The Sun aald Ruth confirmed re
ports he had beaten the Callforninn
by a sleesblc mareln In a strictly
private match at the Quaker Ridge
course.. This was a few days after
the Indecisive match which Ruth.
Montague. Bnbe Dldrlkson and Mrs.
Sylvia Annenberg played at Fresh
Meadow.
"Yes, I beat him at Quaker Rldgc
but I was pretty lucky," Ruth told
the newspaper. "He was away off his
game."
Joe Williams of the World-Telegram
said he understood Ruth's victory
was 5 and 3 but added the former
home run king declined to give any
details.
Ruth told the Sun he had played
Montague three or, four times and
that the Csllfornlsn hsd yet to beat
him.
SALVATION KETTLES
ON STREET SATURDAY
Medford citizen will tomorrow
have an additional reminder that
Christmas la near when they hear
the tinkling of the Christmas bells
of The Salvation Army. Adjutant
Durham announceo today that the j
familiar pota and tripods will oe
placed on the atreet tomorrow at
8:30 a. m. and Salvation Army lassies
and laddies will make music with the
bells until 8:30 p. m. The pots will
not be on the street again until the
following Saturday when they will
again make their appearance and will
then be out each day until Chrlat
maa. Money dropped in the pota goes
to purchase supplies for the army's
Christmas baskets for poor families.
Through the effort last year th army
was enabled to distribute 107 bas
kets of food costing 3.50 per. basket
and, in addition, provide a Chrlat
mas tree with new presents for 3o0
needy children.
IN CUPP'S GREAT
SALE1'000
ATTEND THIS SENSATIONAL
SALE SATURDAY
LITERALLY HUNDREDS OT BARGAINS
JOHN CUPP FURNITURE STORE
fc : '.. :
New luDTas. rercaies.
SALE! Cotton IFrocks
. i -
1:
?3K!
rti m n'j -! me styles you uamor ror ar
tH fc'V ' "J-n :.' The Usual AQr Price. I
13 lMW tr yi S
11 wmrsr 2 f nv 1 MM
i 1 flM U J- T" frocks that look twice their price I mSK&9 H
H mWAJa 3; TlcK Lively- colorful prints! Polka- ( Hg3y&g
' Ifi 'if. PJfcU,i'fi dots! Fine quality percales noted I Jagl - If
iVIl X&VvTtDr" for lonB service' AU tubfast! ?1 ll
Mt J?:.?,fr Sizes from 14 to 20; and 38 to 52. i i 1
H rcf'!j Sale! French Crepe '
gf,,si :'si i w i iieuuven lor iiirniy snouuvrs m
w hi mmrj " i
: :M -LL
, ("j rfoM " A? ' Yw 111 If you want to spend only 81 here'a your H
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H y I I 1 V ,ll Warm and Attractive
t-l I If JT X Flannelette Gowns j
l m 1 I' I aA ','M DeubU f rent md back
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1 - SSLAML ,, , , 'IMULiin
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I Word Meed I '. . . ' ff j ' (I
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V n,ct"- Lovely colon I
"...
I ' ' '
1
REGULAR PRICE 16c! Buy several dress lengths
for Christmas gifts I You'll love the smart new
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0 .imioii Towel Sets...
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Attractively boxed Turklnh bath
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4 Pieces
298
Two enrh of Turltlah bath, frvee
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SO'MOR"
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They tit without a bulge or
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?M':J
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T?P8
BSH)M(E(lDMIEfflrif WAMDD
I . 117 SOUTH CENTRAL
a '
TELEPHONE 288
3