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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1938)
f PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON. MONDAY, .TUNE 13. 1938. MEDFORDvJTRIBUNE "tCvtrn Id riouthrrp Orrinp HmO th Mali rrthuae." Dally fSirl talimlaf. Hubllina1 by UhlUfeliRn PRINTING CU. H'tl'M N Plr lit. phone HO UK HI VV HUHU Ddttor KNBKT R OIUSTRAK Maniir- AO lnrti)nflDt Nawapapcr. Entararl nennrt-liw matttl at Mad . forl. Orafon, u nil at Aol nf March I, l7 til INSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mall In A1vanci , Dally, ont vacr Ik.uu Dally, all mootha IT! Dally ona month ( By Carriar. in Advanca Mad ford. Aart land. Jaekaonvllla. C a n l r a Holni, Phoami. Talanu Oold Hill and on Dally, ona yaar I w Dally, als montha J 26 Dally, ona month All ttrmi caah in advanea. OfflHal Paprr of Ibr City l MMlfurd Official Vmpt at Jarkaoo County UKMHttH (l IHh AWMM lAIEIt I'MKHH Kfoiin Pull l.MMtd ivtrr Hrvir. Tha Aaaociaiafl I'raaa atcluaival an tltlad io i ha uaa (oi publication of all naw dlatiaichaa cradnad to M ot nthar arlaa eraditad to rhlo pa par. and alae to tha local tiawa puhllahan naram. All r1a;ht for pcMtcatlon of .pacta i dlapatoha haraln ara alan raaarvad. MEMBER OF UNITED t'RUHS MEMBER OF AUDI! BUR BAH i)V CIHC'IM.ATIONP Orrieaa in Naw York, '.'bicagu, Ditrolt, San rranolaco. Loa Anialaa. flaattla, Portland. ML LoBta, Atlanta. Vanooovar. Member OreopNewspapei Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Housewives of Seattle, Wish., In. convenience!) by baker'a atrike, aur mount the Inconvenience by baking home-made bread. With the same unconquerable pioneer aplrlt, the household allcea lta own bread dur Ing tha baker'a atrlka. With tho Fourth of July coming on apace. Bend announoea It will make the eagle, and wlvea ecream, by Issuance of an edict, directing all malea to raise whlakera ' patriotic gesture. Up popa Salem boaatlng lta menfolka "are perhaps the only city dwellers In Oregon who haven t been required to go anave lens for some special occasion In the last decade." Here la another burg that never let humdlngor aeal un consciously Inflict a boycott barbers. Jimmy, the son and secretary of tho President, rejected a request he run for lieutenant-governor of Massa. chuaetts. Ho feels "he has an obliga tion above all else to remain at my duties at Washington." Judging by recent election returns from Iowa. In which Jamea Inferentlally mixed It's a fin Idea. "And anybody who Is CAUOHT playing politics with relief ought to be run out of tha country at the nd of a pitchfork." (Klamath Palls Herald) The wretch should also have his ears boxed and hla tobacco taken away from him. Counterfeit S5 bills ara reported In circulation In the metropolis. This may be criminal skullduggery, or It may be another short-cut to Utopia, under the Every Man Hla Own Mint Plan. Pre-autumn signs have appeared in tne Eastern Oregon press. A want. ad heralds a wanderer desiring to swsp a trailer for a piece of land, with some wood to cut, and a spring near tne nouse. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor announce they will vUlt America next March. Their first visit hit snag, when a protest waa filed against the chaperone. Eight months' notice gives ample time to think up anotner protest. ... owing music, says a cable, has captured Shanghai. Softened as It was by the Jap bombardment, the unhappy city could put up little re sistance." (Detroit News) Terrors or- music. ... HRASS ' (Press Dispatch) "Mrs. Monesen received two letters from the government. One Informed her that a new destroyer was to be named Mon ssen In honor of her husband. The other notified her the Home Owners' Loan corporation, a fed eral agency, was going to sell her home for failure to meet pay ments." Kurope was shaken by an earth quake Saturday, without Mother Na ture, who is still boss, even In Eu- rope, requesting the consent of Dictators Musaollnl and Hitler. Martin county, Kentucky, has no radloa or paved roads, according to a scribe, who la writing a series of articles on the expending of WPA funds for votes In the coming state primary. The Martin county natives, however, all know a dollar when they see one. I'M MM TlTKEIlr'.ll "In May wa observed Child Health Day. National Baby Week, National Music Week. National E?g Week. National Restaurant Week, National Pool Health Week. National Clolf Week. Na tional R a I a I n Week. National Marlllme Day, p,are Week. Ice Cream Week. Straw Hat Day, Outdoor Cleanliness Dsy, Inter national Oood Will bay, Ns ttonsl Tennis Week and tha Dlonne quint birthday. And on top of all that, we worked three or four days. Ira no wonder that were all tuckered out." (Oak land Tribune.) Use Mall Tribune Want Ads. AdvartlalnK ilapraaantatlTao Defining Labor's Rights JJERHAPS labor conditions they get better. If so the United Stales will Great Britain. For Great Britain passed which were about as pro-labor Then the general strika putting, it is estimated half costing the people about two This was the straw that broke the camel's back. Overnight public sentiment changed from Disputes and Trade Unions Act Since then, in striking contrast to tho United States, there have been no serious strikes in England; labor and capital, have been getting along in peace mid . PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT plans tr. send a mission to this Trades Disputes Act, and being administered and what Atlantic. John L. Lewis doesn't like move on tho part of tho government to follow in the footsteps of Great Britain will be regarded by him and his organization as an "unfriendly act." It is barely possible the administration will not be bluffed by the C.I.O. chief this time. F so the people will find, the GENERAL strikes illegal. It renders strikers criminally a community with serious injury Under certain circumstances for strike damages. It imposes certain restrictions upon the political activities of trade unions, and requires all funds to the Registrar, of Friendly Societies and through that medium, to tho public. The general philosophy of accept obligations imposed by protections bestowed by law, capital mid labor, the public TPHE measure is not anti-labor, right to strike and to bargain collectively. It renders the "lock-out" as illegal as the general strike, and protects the workingman from intimidation, on the part of the employer, as well as on the part of the union "boss". ' But it does most decidedly clear the labor atmosphere. It shows what are labor's legitimate rights, the legitimate rights of capital, and more important than cither, what are the rights of tho long-suffering publfc. T is to be hoped this presidential commission IS sent to Eng land and does report its findings to the American people, and to the congress of tho United As a result this country might experience, without suffering as of two and a-half billion dollars, to the unemployed list, and for cial and industrial paralysis. A consummation dcvoutlv to' The Portland Strike . HP111S hotel strike in Portland but. if it. rfnvnlnna na n uimilsii utrilrn in Ran PVnnmcpn rlirl year ago it will cost the community hundreds of thousands of dollars, and benefit exactly no What are tho hotel employees striking for anyway? As was the case in San Francisco no says one thing, Another savs federal mediator runs around one side to the other, in a vain This much is certain, there volved, no vital issues at stake. hotel association and their employees could not have ironed out their troubles without a walkout, as far as the importance of the controversy is concerned. OUT they didn't. And as a employees lose their pay, and lose prestige and patronage; the retail merchants lose business. In Kngland of course, such a called. For the Trado Disputes Act and the hotel employees would have known, that without assist ance from their fellow unionists, they would be beaten on such an issue, before they got a start. BUT even more important than the provisions of the act itself, u-niilil liii thi plmrnptpr nf rmhlin nnininn ovpr thfrA. Since that general strike of a o be regarded in England, ss, as a measure ot last resort. Nothing to be entered into employed only when the issue all other measures of reaching As a result there would be no thought of ordering a walkout f this sort in an English metropolis, for there would be utterly no popular support for it, and he start. We can think of nothing that atmosphere in this country, and letween labor and capital, than warranted strike, on the part of I IN FALL ON ILK Suit for M859 50 aKslnst Rmer Chlldrra and Lelah Chiklers. has been riled In circuit court by Jiwephlne Sleight, for alleged injurlrs to her leg, tmtslnrd when on the niaht of May 20, 1037. she tripped Ielt will have to get worse before merely follow in the foostepg of four labor statutes in 40 years as the Wagner Act. of 1926 paralyzed the country a million men but of work and and a half billion dollars. pro- to anti-labor. The Trades of 1927 was the result. harmony. . . a few days ago announced he England this summer, to study report to him precisely how it is the reactions ot it are across the the idea. He intimates that any Trades Disputes Act, makes all liable if their actions threaten or inconvenience. it makes trade unions liable unions to report their political the Act is that trade unions must law, if they are to benefit from and that in all disputes between welfare must be held paramount, however. It supports labor's States. enjoy the benefit of England's England suffered, to the tune an increase of half a million several weeks, virtual commcr be wished. is a comparatively small affair, one. one seems to know. One side something else. Meanwhile a like a cat chasing its tail, from effort to find out. are no serious differences in There is no reason why the result everyone suffers. Tho, perhaps their jobs; the hotels community, particularly the strike would never have been prevents a sympathetic strike decade ago, the strike has come it should always be regarded lightly or casually. But to be is of genuine importance, and an understanding have failed therefore, it would be doomed would do more to clear the advance peace and harmony a similar attitude toward the the American people on the sidewalk In front of property on East Main street, near Riverside avenue, owned by the defendants. The complaint a lie Res the plaimifi caught her loot in a hole in the side walk, which the further alleges wa not kept In proper tepalr, and wa injured. Wages she claimed were lost, and medical care tipenses are sought In the action. Attorney George A Cod ding appears as counoel for the plain tiff. SEMI-ANNUAL CLKAHANCI foats - UTMSes - Hats ITHXLWVN B HOFFMANN Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered No reply can he made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. 269 El L'amlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. ACID STOMACH During digestion or In many In stances when hunger, appetite or de sire for food Is stimulated by the sight, cdor or even the thought of food of which one Is particularly fond, the gastric lutce is acid. Thi acid In gastric Juice is hydro chloric (muratlc) acid. If the secre tion of acid Is deficient, t h. e digestion of food In the stomach Is retarded and the progress of the meal thru tne stomadi and on Into the Intestine Is delayed too, The subocldlty of hypochlor-hydrla Is usually present In anemia, chronic gastritis, In persons with vitamin deficiency and in some cases of cancer of the stomach. If tho gastric Juice Is too acid, hyperacidity, hyperchlorhydrla, "acid stomach" the digesting food Is likely to be hurried through the stomach and on Into the Intestine before the normal digestion In the stomach is completed. Hyperacidity occurs with gastric or duodenal ulcer, gallstones, in excessive smokers and in some cases of "neurasthenia" or overlrrl- tabtllty or abnormally sensitive reac tion to everyday emotional stimuli. (Space dsea not permit more detailed explanation see "Nerves and Nutri' tlon," No. IS In Little Lessons se ries). When the hydrochloric acid la di minished or absent, proteins are badly digested, and long retention of the foods in the stomach leads to fer mentation (of starches or sugars) with formation of lactic acid and other acids such as butryle, as well as gases. Heartburn." or a painful sensa tion felt in the region of the esopha gus, behind the breastbone, It due to regurgitation of even normal gas tric Juice into the esophagus or gul let; or to regurgitation of hyperacid stomach contents. Pain caused by acid where acid should not be. Watcrbrash" U the burning and irritation of the throat by normally acid or hyperacid fluid regurgitated from the stomach. Eructation of gas, belching, may occur In any case oi nypoacm or hyperacid stomach. In some of the moat pronounced instances of belch ing, however, there is nothing tne matter with the stomach, Just an Man About Manhattan Bj GKOKGB rUCKKR NEW YORK Perhaps you remem ber her in some tropic twilight on tho beach at Walklkl, with a blos som in ner nair . . . You have seen her. I know, smiling from the M a t s o n steam ship line ads. in Vogue, In Col liers, in many. many other mag azines . . . If you have been to Honolulu you may even have neen her dance, for she is half- Scotch, and half- GEORGE TUCKR hHWBl Ian, and dancing Is her business. You may even have glimpsed her hurrying Into a shop on Fifth ave nue, on one of those curious, end less shopping excursions which seem eternally to occupy the minds of young ladles . . . But if you are really lucky ... If you are one of those to whom refreshing and en chanting things sometimes happen. you will have wandered Into the Hawaiian room at the Lexington and seen her dance those ancient, native hulas of Hawaii . . . You will have seen her In a raffia made of tl- leaves. which she keeps every night in a tun of loewater. because the tl- leaves are fresh and If they are not placed in water they will die. And, seeing her. you will have hailed the first passing waiter and In quired her name. Let me beat the wslter to It. Let me tell you her name. It Is Pualanl, which In the land beyond old Dia mond Head, means "nower of Hea ven." They say ahe Is the mcst photo graphed girl In the Islands . . . Bay Kinney told me about her last year . . . And then he went back to Honolulu to build his orchestra and arrange for the presentation of old gourd dances and hulas and fine tropic entertainment . . . When he returned Pualanl wss with htm Pualanl and two other girts , Napua ( me nowerl and Mspuana Warm Caress). Napua ts considered one of me nnesi swimmers on the Island: Ampuana i a dancer, and her mother Is a famous slnitor. It Is these three who do the ancient gourd dance, a throbbing, rhythmic chant agilnst a background of thumpinc drums, high strings and male voices. After more than my rlahtful share of hours whlled away In this atmos phere of hurricanes and tropic bow ers 1 am reminded of a coincidence in realism which net touched Frcd r:c March ome years aejo when he did "The Roval Family and tir. hy caricatured the eccentricities of John Barrymore. He was so pfrfect In the ro;e thnt the wss wrre some around saying. "Barrymore pts more like March every day." And thst's what I mean. If thing keep on the way they have been. The llawnl:nns wi:l have to come to New York for their native atmos phere. Instead of New Yorkers board ma plan.-s and ships for the Pacific Indeed somch-dy. after a visit to Honolulu, may very veil crack: (1 AND THAT OAS unconscious, perhaps "nervous" habit of swallowing air and expelling with sound effects. This is the ex planation for many "gas attacks' which are brought on by emotional upset. It Is a common fallacy that such a "gas attack" or the presence of more than the normal amount of air or gas In the alimentary tract, or what seems an excessive amount, Is dangerous. The danger is that may "press on the heart" and Inter fere with, If not stop, the heart. No such thing ever happens. The worst excessive air or gas In the stomach can do is to cause some slight dis comfort from the "bloated" feeling that accompanies it. If the patient Is not unduly alarmed or worried about t'.ie "pressing on the heart" the temporary discomfort is pres ently relieved In the natural way, that Is, by the onward progress, of gas or air Into the Intestine. In any case there Is no Imperative need of something to "bring up" the gas or absorb It or get rid of. (ILBSTIONS AND ANSWERS Hernia Cured Following your suggestion last Oc tober I began taking ambulant treat ment for hernia from Dr. and he now informs me I can now dis continue wearing my truss. I want to thank you for saving me the ne cessity of going to a hoslptal for cpertaton. (J. 8.) I had 19 Injec tions In all. Answer One State Industrial Com mission reports that the injection or ambulant treatment Is now employed in 90 per cent of all Industrial cases In that state. Bureaucrats In some states lay back their long ears and warn physicians that the Industrial commission will not recognize or pay for ambulant treatment. You pays your taxes and takes what the bosseB think fit for you. Incompetent Troubled for ten years with bleed ing from rectum. Doctor I visited said he had no instrument for ex amination. (8. T. C.) Answer Then he might have re ferred you to a doctor who is equip ped to take care of such cases. Send a stamped addressed envelope and I'U name the nearest I know. (Copyright, 1938, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 El Cam I no, Beverl) Hills. Calif. "Strike me if Hawaii doesn't get mora like the Hawaiian Room every day." There Is a restaurant on the east side In Manhattan where clovers are included In the flower decorations on each table. If you find a four leaf clover in your flower vase, you automatically become the manage ment's guest for dinner. LICENSE FEE HALVED License fees at one-half the annual rato will be accepted at the sheriff's office, on and after Wednesday. June 15. for all motor trucks, busses, dol lies and Trailers, as defined by Ore gon law, and for wreckers, tow cars, hearses, ambulances, anywhere-for-hlre taxis, and for applicants who can qualify for a farmer's truck license. However, no reductions are author ized by law. for any of the following registrations, according to the sher iff's office: "Private passenger vehicles; 6-pas-senger taxlcaba, operating exclusively within and not more than three road miles beyond city limits: all of which require the flat license fee of $5. "Vehlclea designed andor used for carrying, conveying or moving over the hlghwaya of this state any freight, property, article or thing, and hav ing a combined weight of vehicle and maximum load to be carried thereon of 4.00Q pounds or leas, which require the flat license fee of IS. ' "Dealers and wrecking houses, "Motorcycles, motor bicycles, and motorcycles with side-cars. "Motor, vehicles, trailers and semi trailers owned and operated by the state of Oregon, counties or other political subdivisions of the stste." HAT ON In the office. Mr. II. W. Dooley. for five yeara chiet commKsloner of I1. S. Immigra tion service In Puerto Rico, doffs the hat when nhe'a outdoors. She rrcarilt Puerto Rice which is under American flu as a clinic for Clliltnshlp The Capital Parade (Continued from Page Ona postmaster general from the prest dent. Big Jim pooh-pooha the wholt business, but the disagreement la there all the same. . The president has gone hereay-hunting, and big Jim ts not a heresy hunter. To be sure, the defeat of Senator Millard r. Tydlngs, of Maryland would give him some pleasure, and he would not weep to see "Cotton Ed" Smith beaten In South Carolina But -he undoubtedly deplores the president's use of the prlmarlea for a wholesale party purge. He was on the opposite side from the president in Oregon and Iowa, and still opposes the forays against Senator Walter p. George In Georgia and Senator Alva a. Adama In Colorado. To frlenda on Capitol Hill, he has described them as sadly and uselessly disruptive of party unity. Thus far, the president has been content to go his own way and let Big Jim go his. There has never yet been an unpleasant word between them. Since Farley and Secretary Wallace tacitly opposed hla candidate in Iowa, however, the president Is said to have decided to make all his subordinate sing a single tune. Its fortunate, therefore, that long-planned and needed vacation in Alaska and the northwest will keep mg Jim our or Washington In pri mary time. Thus, unpleasant words will be avoided, and he can return to pick up the pieces and put over the Democratic candidates,, whoever they may be. These tasks are more con genial to him than any others. He'd rather make peace between factions to elect a Democratic dog-catcher man win a thousand bets on the races Big Jim la Just the sort of fellow his name suggests. A large, plnk- uttca man oi pleasant aspect and manners. He .Is a natural Idol for rank and file party workers. Alone among the eminent officials of the New Deal, be knows the local party politicians, their habits, appetites names. For this .eason some men around the president fear mm ana nis influence He lives simply, does not drink or smoke, and goes out little. His days are dedicated to his party. Unhappily. ma uevouon to nia party la likely to iaurc nis disagreement with the president to recur after the fall elec tions. Then It will be time to thlnv of 1940. snd each man thinks In a very different way. Big Jim would hold all the elements In the Democ racy together with a middle-of-the-road candidate. The president would purge the pnrty, bring In new and more radical blood,- and unite It on an aggressively new deallsh platform with an aggressively new deallsh leader. The two men have been a team for many yeara. They are still a team, but, unless one or the other changes his mind, the time must come when the team will Buffer the fate of most teams. LINCOLN COUNTY SEAT REMOVAL TRIED AGAIN NEWPORT, June 13. (AP) A pe tition has been filed with the Lin coln county court for placing on the November ballot a measure to move the county seat from Toledo to New port, removal to take place, If car ried. January 1, 1940. Thla la the third attempt to move the county seat. Use Mall Tribune Want Ads. Jackson County Federal Savings &Loan Association 126 East Main Comment on the Days News i By FRANK JENKINS TEN Democratic senators, Includ ing Roosevelt supporters as well as critics, propose appointment of a three-man senatorial committee to Investigate "any chargea of politics In connection with relief which mlgbt arise In the course of the 1938 election campaign," lTOTE, please, that the proposal is 1 put forth on the day following the Iowa primary election, In which Relief Administrator Hopkins FAIL ED so disastrously In his efforts to play politics. wnen you do something youre ashamed of and it LOESNT WORK, you're pretty apt to make a ploiu resolution NOT TO DO IT AGAIN, NYBODY who plays politics (or a TRIES to) with tho needs of hungry people OUGHT to be asham ed of it whether it works or not. And anybody who is CAUGHT playing politics with relief ought to be run out of the country at the end of a pitchfork. HOPKINS, incidentally, gave out a statement to the reporters to the effect that Gillette's re nomina tion In the Iowa primary. In spite oi New Deal opposition, is proof that WPA la NOT playing politics. That is to say, If you don't get away with it you're honest, and can't be blamed for TRYING. OUT let's quit kidding and talk - sense for a moment. For five years we've been experi menting with taking it away from those who have and giving It tc those who haven't. The NET RESULT la millions of unemployed and other millions on the borderline of unem ployment because of the impending failure of Industry and business un der the take-and-give system. t this writer's Judgment, are piti ful unfortunates who are compelled to subsist on the mere pittance of relief, which Is Just enough to keep body and soul together. Instead ol earning the good wages they used to earn before government became the ENEMY OF BUSINESS. The politicians who brought these poor unfortunates to their present sad state do not hesitate to TRADE ON THEIR MISFORTUNE by using them as pawns in the game of poli tics. Political morals can fall no lowei than that. WO HELD IN INJURY TO B AND P DELEGATE j McMINNVTLLE. Ore., June 13. . (AP) Don Lesley and Don Schmidt, ; both of Portland, are held In the county Jail on open charges as re sult of an accident on highway 18 Saturday night. Sheriff O. W. Manning said their car, driven by Schmidt, sldeswiped the car of Mrs. Julia Webster, Sa lem, a delegate to the state Business k Professional Women's club con vention. She was injured slightly. Manning said he found a bottle of gin in the men's car. Funds invested by July tenth will participate in the next dividend for the full six months period, figured from July first. Your savings are secured by first mortgages, principally on homes, and are insured up to $5,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Flight o' Time Med ford and Jackson County history from, the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 13, 1928. -(It waa Wednesday.) Mention of President Coo I id ge at Kansas City convention of OOF starts wild demonstration. Col. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., to vis It here In fall. Attorney Harry Skyrman undergoes anoperatlon for appendicitis. Prink Calll son. coach of the high school, to be married soon. Bumper crop and high prices pre dicted for pears. Labor shortage In orchards. Crater Lake hotel next week. to be opened Valley grain la damaged by rain, but fruit crop La aided. TWENTY YEARS A0 TODAY Juno 13, 1918. (It was Thursday.) Senate rejects admendment to limit speeches to 00 minutes on war legis lation. French troops hurl German drive across the Matz. Tomlln box factory ships first car of boxes to Roseburg. The twelfth annual commence ment exercises of the Central Point high school held last night. Thunder and lightning storm causes $8000 loss io Copco lines. Many local autolsts pay fines for speeding. Goon Sentenced PORTLAND. Ore., June 13. (AP) y James A. Dawes, Portland, was sen- T tenced to six months in Jail here Saturday in circuit court. He pleaded guilty to window breaking. Dawes, a union teamster, was taken in the drive against labor terrorism this year. He was given credit for 45 days already served. Use Mail Tribune Want Ads. Chevrolet JINGLES The next time you bave a few minutes to spare, Just listen to the conversa tion, most anywhere. Sooner or later you're just bound to hear, Talk of economy that's music to your ear! And it won 't be ramblings of some dumb cluck, That bought a new car and trusted to luck. But an economical buyer with a new Chevrolet, Started cutting car expense the very first day! Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Dept 32 No. Riverside led Car Lot Riverside nt 4th