PAGE STX
fEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD," OREGON. SUNDAY. ' .TTJI.Y 3. 1938
Medfo:
UNI
"KvrrrtiM l ttuulhrrn Oregon
KMdi tbe Mall IrlbuM."
Dally Kirp atvrda.r.
UBUroHD PRINTINO CO.
II-JI J8 N Plr 8L PhOM l
ROBERT W BUHU 'lit or.
RNESHT R OlLSTRAf, lUnaor.
A.o lndpo4lnt Nwtpr.
ntrd MoonfllMt aiatttt at U4
ford, Orion. urti Aet of Mareb I, 1ST.
SUBSCRIPTION RATBI
By 1411 lo A1anct
Dally, on rar 14.00
Dally, ait montba
Daily oo .niaih 40
By Carrlar. id Advanea Had ford. Aah
land, Jaekannvilla. Caatral Point,
Phoanla. Talant. 0ld BUI tad
hlghwayat
Dally, ona raar..., .11.00
'' Dally, all montha I. II
Daily, ona month 0
All tarma eaah In advaJMa.
Official Paper of lb City of tfrdfnrd
Offlrlal Vmpet of Jarkana Cooaty
HEMHKH Of I Hft AKJWOA I KU PHRHI
KaMWl.Ing Poll ImmI W1r rwttm.
Tha A'ciatM Praaa la aielaalvaly o
tltlad to iha uaa foi publication of all
ntw dlapatchta eradltart to it or othar
via oroliiaft to thta pa par. and alae to
tha local nawa publlahad haraln.
All rlghta for publication of apaelai
dltpaiohaa harain ara aian raaarvan.
UEHHKR OF UNITED PftfCflB
afRURBR OF AUDI! BUREAU
IP CIRCULATIONS
AdTartlalnii rtapraaantattM
tXMeM ID N,w Torn. :blcu. DMrelt,
Sao Francisco, Los AnrlM. af tla.
rorlUsd. l teals. Attests. Taaeeaver,
B. 0.
11 vefnbt-v
0Sgr4wspapmb(i(KWi
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Perry.
Citizen generally trekked for tbe
hllla and vales, and up and down the
highway, over the week-end to cele
brate Independence Day, of whtoh,
aome of the beet Uitnkers aay, there
will be none ere long. If the present
national lick li maintained.
O. Qay. while crossing Oakdala Pri.
a.m. to get out of the road of an
auto, Jumped quicker than a eat at
least quicker, than the Elki tom-cat.
,
The weather the past week, cauaed
many malea to huk their coata, ana
Bhow vivid lined auependere. 1
,
The JV. and Dub Wataon klda hare
returned from the aeashore where
they paid no attention to what, the
wild wave were saying, if snytning.
Roasting ears look promising In
the rural areas, but the farmers wlil
have to get on their knees to pick
them, aa the corn Is not growing like
a weed.
The C. Wig Ashpole boy, Chuck, an
nounces he does not want to see bis
came In the paper any more, which
la the surest way of getting It ttier.
Tom Bradley, showed up again on
the Main Stem last week, where he
was not eonsplcloue for about . a
month. He states he has been work
Ing. a
Th newa In the SatEvePott, that
the President1! boy Jimmy, mi mak
ing 9300,000 to aa, 000 000 per year, u
an Insurance agent, caused local Re
publican Ins. agts. to allege James
would starve to deatti. If In their
shoes, and, they could beat him with
an even start. They ara Just Jealous.
Even democrat tna. agta. admitted,
the boy was a stemwlnder, while
looking and.
a
The gals wilt wear 'Doll Hats' this
fall, and from advanoe descriptions
the menfolks can hardly wait to see
tiow they don't look.
a .
F. Luy, the Antelope cowhand and
agrarian reports he has been working
like a Trojan, dog;, ant, and bee, and,
furthermore, Is In hot water with his
hay.
a
The new trafflce signals at Main
& Central are functioning, and the
cheery whistle, from Uie old set. has
been Installed. There was consider
able horn tooting at first, at the
oontraptlon, by rused motorists, but
thev bowed to the Inevitable, and
now accept the delay stoically.
a
Woodpeckers have started drilling
cupboards for winter's food, and, are
aa handy with their beaks, as the
snare drummer In the hs. band.
a a a
The Iocs! sotdats returned from
camp last week, where they were put
through their paces.
The fire season has started In the
timber, and people are urged to be
careful, and use their heads while
scratching a match.
a a a
The Floyd Hart boy was downtown
tha middle of the week, barefootad
and sans shirt. He Is all boy, and
a fraction of a yard wide.
a a a
Uncle John Griffin, the pioneer
bear alaper was around last week,
and Is feeling fine, snd able to listen
to the radio.
a a a
Elm Chtlders, who a week ago be
came an Alpinist and shinned up a
lofty cliff on the upper Rogue, is
hlmsMf again, and will climb no
more cliffs.
a a a
The weekly pull haul will ba
held at Ashland Mon. eve before the
fireworks.
a a a
A Professional Friend of tha Farm
ers was In this region, Thurs.. warn
ing folks to look out for a Sales Tai
pl'-t. and Wall Stmt devilment,
I'oMofrire Promised
TILLAMOOK. July 3. (API Sen
ator Evan Rames ( D-Ore. advlard
Louis E. Hammer, postmaster, today
that an allocution of $85,000 has been
atie lor a uew postofflca Her.
A Business Expert Speaks
ONE of tbe moat respected businesi advisers, in tbe country
today recently broadcasted his view of the present political
situation, and Ha relation to business.
We are unable to quote bis statement verbatim, but the
general idea was this: ' .
"Mr. Bualneaa Man: Aa an INDIVIDUAL apeak and vote and
think aa you please. But aa a BUSINESS man, try to separate
your business self from your personal self. Be realistic. Stop
keeping your head In the sands of self-delusion and wishful
thinking. Don't mourn for the good old days. Be smart enough
to acknowledge the truth, that the good old daya have gone
and never will return. Above all accept a a fact the main gov
ernment policies now in effect. Don't stop opposing those you
do not favor, necessarily,' but adjuat your business decisions to .
tha status quo. Stop kidding yourself. Regard as permanent re
. forma many of the new curbs and controls, you do not like, i
Try to understand tbe reasons for them. Try to foresee what
WILL be aa distinct from what OUOHT to be. This attitude Is
part of the mental equipment for successfully running a busi
ness." ......
Wiser words were never spoken. If American business
big and little should immediately start to ACT on the above
advice, accept oertain basio principles of the New Deal as
permanent, and adjust their business policies to them accord
ingly, how quickly the economic skies would brighten 1
..
FOR one of the chief obstacles to any permanent improvement
in business ia the deep seated dislike and suspicion of
President Roosevelt and his policies, resulting in a lack of
business confidence and THEREFORE business activity.
In other words IP business as a whole would disregard Mr.
Hoover for a little while, and accept' the TRUTH, even tho it
be unpalatable, that the days of rugged individualism in this
country, are as dead, as the days of the hoop skirt, the covered
wagon and the flint-lock musket, , . . , ,
That rugged individualism, as generally accepted, was the
product of a rich pioneer country, and an undeveloped one, and
can't be resurrected in the world we have today, ....
That federal control, of business, that federal aid both to
business and the individual, have come not as a result of dema
gogic political manipulation, but as inevitable products of a
new world and a new economy, and whether we like them or
not are here to stay, ...
That such policies of tho New Deal, as strict supervision of
banks and stock exchanges; old age security and unemploy
ment insurance; elimination of child labor; a minimum wage
and maximum hour day; the inalienable right of labor to bar
gain collectively; federal guarantee of bank deposits, etc., etc.,
are also here to stay.
(They may be, undoubtedly will be modified as experi
ence reveals technical defects in the way of practical adminis
tration ; but as PRINCIPLES, regardless of the political party
in control, they are almost certain to be retained.)
IF business WOULD do this: Accept certain New Deal fun-
damentals, AS principles, upon which the government of
tbe present and future will be conducted, and abandon the
idea that the only thing needed to throw them all in the ash
can is to vote the Republican ticket straight. Then business
would, as the above statement maintains, be adopting that
realistic, practical minded attitude, essential to the successful
operation OF business. '
Above all, it would allow Mr. Business Man the opportunity
to devote all his energies to improving his business, under the
conditions which are practically certain to obtain, instead of
wasting them in a futile attempt to brush baok the tide of eco
nomic and social change, with a 19th century boom I
Advice To Franklin D.
SO much for the business experts advice to business. It would
not h fair to leave the subiect there, however.
For not in this particular broadcast, but in others, the name
individual has given his advice to President Roosevelt.
. Again we are unable to quote him verbatim, but his general
idea has been something like this:
"Mr. President: You have accomplished a great number of
needed reforms. In a remarkably short time. World wide forces
through you. have brought about an- epoch-making political
revolution. History will record you have won a great victory
over forces of greed. Inhumanity and reaction. But history has
yet to record what you WILL DO with that victory. In other
worda whether for you personally It la going to be a tragedy or
a triumph, whother you shaU go down In history as another
Lincoln, or Just another Oeneral Meade, who won a great vic
tory, but lacked the vision and the wisdom, to follow It up,
and, make tbe moat of It.
"It's up to you Mr. President, and It Is up to you now. If
you are to follow In the footsteps of Lincoln, then you must
follow up thla victory over buslneas with a victory over your
self. You must abandon youi suspicions, your dislikes and
your prejudices. Just as business men, must abandon theirs,
and you must stop fighting business and devote your time and
energies, to. helping buslneas. legitimate, honest business.
which not only for Itself but for the good of the country and
everyone In It. most emphatically needs It.
"Yes. that must be your NEW 'New Deal',' Mr. President, If
li you are going to be the saviour of your country, that you
undoubtedly wish to be, and If you are truly a great man, not
merely a political genius, who grabbed opportunity by the fore
lock, but an extremely wise, skillful and Intelligent statesman.
"For aa a atudent of American history, you will recall that
was the 'Lincoln Way.' He knew so well there was a time, to
start and a time to atop: a time to fight, and a time to stop
fighting: a time to tear down pitilessly: and a time to recon
struct and build up. with a broad understanding and deep
buman aympathy.
"1 am not calling on you to abandon one of your reforma,
or neglect one of your Ideal. I am merely asking you to be wise
as Lincoln waa wise who st the time of hi final triumph so
clearly perceived, that Just a this country could not exist half
slave and half-free. It could not eilst, half a prosperous con
tented and arrogant north: and half a crushed, hopeless and
resentful south. And had be lived he would bare led In a
glorious return thru national reconstruction, revival and re
habilitation. "That la our country's great need today Mr. President,
you have won your victors', now with malice toward none and
charity for all, show you are big enough and wise enough to
make the most of It. FOR your country and ALL the people In
It.
We admit in the above we have taken even more liberties
with out business experts words, than in the pharaphrased quo
tation, but the general idea in both instances, has been reason
ably well preserved.
And in the opinion of this column if the experts advice were
followed in both instances, the greatest period of American
peace, prosperity and good feeling, in recent history, would
quickly be the result.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M P.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygtene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self,
addressed envelope la 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 be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Brady. 265 El tamlno. Beverly Hills, Calif, .
THE CRAZE FOR SURGERY
A reader, punctured my pride In
the new word, cii, which X thought
I had Invented, by pointing out that
it la really an old familiar word In
French, meaning
cry. vogue or
fashion aa In
the phrase der
nier crl.
Fad, vogue,
craze, however la
a typical Yankee
custom. Needless
to cite the con
stant succession
of popular crazes.
But medicine,
too, Is subject to
crazes, and nota
bly surgery.
If you are old enough to remem
ber tha craze for cutting a bone out
of the nose, back In the gay nineties
and the early years of the twentieth
century you know that it was fol
lowed by the craze for snaring and
guillotining tonsils and adenoids
which raged among the nose and
throat specialists and even among
the general practitioners for several
years before the war. There was' a
time when a bored youngster could
scarcely say "Huh?" and look dull or
uninterested In what the teacher was
talking about, without grave risk
of being rushed to a clinic to have
his hypothetical adenoids removed.
Actually some Yankee specialists, do
ing a wholesale business via the
clinic rack: ft, had school teachers,
social service workers and similar
runners tagging children and herd
ing them to the clinic for removal
of tonsils and adenoids, on the mere
snap diagnosis of the teacher, nurse
or other Incompetent person who ob
served what the nose and throat
specialists of the day called the
'adenoid face" that Is, a dull, open
mouthed, listless expression.
To be sure, such an expression
may sometimes accompany hyper
trophy or enlargement of adenoid
tissue In nose or throat, but It
stands to tho everlasting shame of
American medicine that during the
tonsil and adenoid craze countless
children were herded thru such op
erations In wholesale fashion with
out the formality of even an examin
ation of the throat by a competent
physician before tha anesthesia.
Even If tha health authorities
nevr recognize or accept my teach -Inga
concerning the prevention of
the common respiratory Infections
(which account for most of tha Ill
ness physicians attend), much less
the cannotatlon of the crl, I shall
still take pride In the part X have
played In educating the public about
the golden rule of hygiene and in
warning the public against wholesale
tonsil snatching. . .
QUESTIONS A ANSWERS
Prostatic Obstruction
I gleaned much helpful Informa
tion from your monograph on "Pros
tatic Obstruction." I wish I could
have had It twenty years ago, when
I thought, like most men of forty,
that 1 was pretty wise. I wish every
young man could be Induced to read
It. (L. H. M.)
Answer Every young man who
cares to read It may have a copy on
request, provided he furnishes a
three -cent-stamped envolope bearing
his address,
Internal Derangement of Knee
Son, aged 31, athlete, wrenched a
knee and has had much trouble for
many months. He fears it msy com
pel him to give up his athletics. The
doctor says a cartilage slipped and
may have been torn. (W. R. M.)
Answer Best course Is to open the
knee and remove the loosened carti
lage. Foolish for healthy young adult
to let such an Injury cripple him that
Pyloric Stenosis
If you have any recent Informa
tion on congenital pyloric stenosis I
would be glad to receive It. (Mrs. T,
A, J.)
Answer Lack of vitamin B In
mother's diet before baby Is born,
and lack of vitamin B In baby's diet,
may be an Important factor. .Sources
of this and other vitamins given In
booklet "Victuals and Vlte" for copy
send twenty-flce cents coin and a
stamped addressed envelope not less
than 4x5 Inches.
Copyright 1938, John F. Dllle Co.
Comment
on the
Days News
By FRANK JENKINS
THE stock market, after rising for
X a week, then hesitating for
day, leapa forward again. Buying
on Wednesday reaches the 3,700.
000 -share mark, tha largest turn
over since October, and, leading
Isauea go up from $1 to 96 a share
W
HY?
There
are many answers, but
this la the best: There are more
buyers than sellers. When there are
more buyers than sellers, prices
GO UP.
117 HY are there more buyers than
TV sellers, when for months sell
era have outnumbered buyers and
prices have gone steadily down? .
Well, If you can answer that
question you're good. But at least
it la obvious that after thinking
for montha that things are going
to be worse, people changed sud
denly to thinking that things are
going to be BETTER.
"I
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Or.
William Brady, M. I).. 269 El
Camlno. Beverl) Hills, Calif.
Man About
Manhattan
By GtOIKlK TUCKER
GEORGE 1UCKR
NEW YORK Today was the best
treat of all. . . . Sick man's treat.
, . . But to expaln, I'll have to go
back. . . . Far a
long time now
Milton Canlff
and Noel Slckels
and this tempor
arily unhorsed
trooper have
made a study A
the Civil War. . .
We have read
nearly ev
erything on this
subject that has
been written
. . . We have
bought most of
the recent books
on It. . . , The Lee books, the Jack
son biographies , the whole dusty
battalion of chronicles of Stuart nd
Sherman and Margon and Bcaure
guard and the others.
When wo arc together we talk In
that lingo, and sometimes, as a gAg,
address each other as if we were
aides attached to the staff of this
officer or that.
Well I became 111. . . And early
this morning a courier raced up to
this house and rang the door. He J
seemed strangely awed. When the
door waa opened he doffed his cap.
bowed and whispered : "For the
Colonel a package for Colonel Tuck-
He seemed Incredulous at hav
ing the god fortune to be delivering
a special delivery package for "The
Colonel."
the pages, as I had hoped to.
"One of General Farley's men has
consented to carry this to you and
he Is anxious to be off. I hope you
soon will be well enough to rejoin
your copimand to carry on In our
glorious cause."
The letter waa signed: "Y'r Ob't
S'rv't. M. Canlff, Brevet-Major, New
York Militia."
SIOCKHilEK
DOUBT." a friend aald the
other day, "If America will
EVER AGAIN aee prosperity equal
to that existing between 1020 and
1020."
"You're crazy." this writer ans
wered Impatiently. "Civilization.
which advances by Increasingly sup
plying human wants, Isn't yet ready
to DIE. Your children will see the
day when they will look back and
say pityingly: 'Poor Dad and
Mothorl Isn't It too bad they could
not have had all the comfort WE
HAVE!' "
NOTE, please, that as long as
people were thinking a certain
way the stock market, which Is one
of the barometers of business, went
steadily DOWN,
Then, suddenly, people began to
think ANOTHER WAY, and the
stock market STARTED UP.
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
history from the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
aen
Ye Poets Corner
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July S, 1928.
(It waa Tuesday.)
Hoover to meet Al Smith's defl,
and will take militant stand
wet-dry Issue during campaign.
Espee announces It will build
branch line from Klamath Falls to
Alturas.
Scores of local people depart for
Fourth of July trips to hills and
seashore. .
Local petitions to save Rogue river
fish being checked.
Bob Hammond. Sr., tells Kiwanlans
what he saw and .heard at Seattle
convention.
Mrs. Bert Harr of the upper Ap
plegate, in a letter to the editor,
predicts tho defeat of Al Smith for
president.
Chester Hubbard, driving to Dia
mond lake. 12 miles from Union
Creek, discovers he Is out of gaso
line. He walks 12 miles for a sup
ply, and then discovers he has plenty
of gasoline In the tank.
TWENTY YEA ItS AGO TODAY
July 3. 11M8.
(It was Wednesday.)
American Xroops capture Vaux from
Germans on western front.
Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Palmer return
from two weeks stay In Portland,
by auto.
Mercury goes to 98 degrees.
A. C. Nlninger of Ashland spends
day in city boosting Fourth of July
celebration there. I
Orchardlsts told time to spray for
codling moths.
A Lie
You never can tell when you tell s
lie,
Like an arrow shot from a bow,
By an archer blind, be It cruel or
kind, -
Just where It may chance to go.
It may pierce (He breast of your
kindest friend, , .
Tipped with Its poison or balm;
To a stranger's heart in life's great
mart,
It may carry 1U pain or Ha calm.
You never can tell when you tell a
lie,
Just what the result may be.
But with every. He you are sowing
seed
Though the harvest you may not
Each kindly act Is an acorn dropped
In God's productive soil;
You may not know but the tree wlil
grow
A shelter from life's toll. , ,
You never can tell wiat a He will do
In bringing you hate or love;
For lies are things and their airy
wlnga
Are swifter than carrier doves.
They follow the laws of the universe;
Each thing must create Its kind;
And they follow your tracks to bring
you back
Whatever went out of your mind.
Betty Wilkle.
Buy Flour For Relief
WASHINGTON. July 2. (AP) The
Federal Surplus Commodities corpor
ation announced today the purchase
this week of $8,000,000 worth of flour
and wheat cereal products for .dis
tribution to families on relief.
Coyotes reported plentiful In Sams
Valley area.
Ex-Editor Suicides
CORTLAND, N.Y., July 2 (AP)
Financial reverar were blamed Vday
for the suicide of Cheala Sherlock. 43
former editor of St. Nicholas and oth
er nationally known marsrlnna, who.
tha coroner said, shot htmnelf at his
farm home after killing his wife.
Italy To Impress
ROME, July 2 (AP) Italy will
end two speedy new cruisers, the
9000-ton Ingento dl Sarola and tma
d' Aosta, on a trip around the world
ta demonstrate her naval strength.
They will dpart toward tht and of Uo far anay In the woods, t was
The package contained one of the
finest water-colors I have ever seen
It was purely a personal gesture, nnd
could mean nothing to an outsider.
Yet 1 can not let this opportunity go
by without explaining what It was.
The sketch showed an abandoned
i:ouse on a red clay roadside In
Geo-gla. In the I860'-. . . . Gathered
In a circle In the center of the rond
wsa a group of Confederate officers.
. . . In the 'shade of aome treee stood
their tired, dusty mounts. . . A few
soldiers were scattered here and
there. . , , Off to one side and o
still they reminded one of frozen
statuary stood an old bandanaed
Mammy with her "passel" of young
blacks. ... An ammunition wagon
stood in yonder corner In the n-.sde
. . . You could tell by the looks on
their faces that something untoward
was happening. . . . Something you
couldn't quite put your hand on. yet
you knew it must be something of
grave concern. . . , And then vou
knew. For under the picture was the
simple caption: "Colonel Tucker is
111."
ON HEAVY BUYING
NEW. YORK. July 2. IP. The
Btock market today finished the week
on one of the broadest upswings In
the past several years.
Heavy buying In Industrial leaders
lifted numerous Issues 1 to more then
4 polnta and the Associated Press
average of 60 stocks shot through
thla year's high to post a net gain
of .8 of a point at 46.4. It attained
the beat level alnee Not'ember 13.
last. On the week this composite
was up 2.0 point.
With the ticker tape late In the
opening drive, when blocka ot 1.000
to 5.000 shares changed hands, and
again three minute In arrears at the
close, transfers for the brief seaalon
touted 1.473.420 shares, the largest
aggregate for any Saturdij since
October 23. The week' turnover of
more than 12.132.000 share was the
best since October.
Saturday's closing prices for 32
selected stocks follow:
Al. Chem. A Dye
Am. Can
Am. As Pgn. Pow
A. T. ft T
Anaconda
KIOW listen carefully:
For yeara people have been
taught to think that workers must
fight the boss and that the boss
mint fear his workers: that we can
have MORE by producing LESS:
that there Is such a thing as some
thing for nothing.
This line of thinking ha brought
STAGNATION.
Someday (Just when no one now
knows) we will find ourselves think
ing that. Instead of fighting, the
boss and his workers must GET
ALONG TOGETHER, each helping
the other; that the imore we pro
duce the more wo HAVE; that there
Is no such thing as something for
nothing.
When that time comes, prosperity
will be here again.
Flattered! Of course I was. i
couldn't get It framed snd hung
quickly enough. N.el Sickles drew it.
And with It came a caricature of
myself aa a trooper In Col. Morgan's
Virginia riflemen, drawn by Wilton
Canlff. to be pasted In the front of
"Rabble in Arms," a chronicle of the
wars of 1776. And wlih it ti ls en
planat.TV note:
"My dear T.: Slnoe we are aban
doning this p,-t on the morrow. I
beg you to take this tittle sketch
to Insert a a frontispiece In your
copy of the chronicles of our armies
In the war aeatntt the British, as t
down bv Peter Merrill. of Arundel
You beins 111 at the time the
volume ass pent you. and me oe:ng
un-
Atch. T. ft S. P
Bendla Avta
Beth. Steel
Caterpillar Tract.
Chrysler
Coml. Sole
Curtlss-Wrlght
DuPont
Gen. Elec.
Oen. Pood .
Gen. Mot.
Int. Harvest.
I. T. ft T
Johns-Man.
Monty Ward -
North Amer.
Penney (J. C.)..
Phillips Pet ....
Radio
Sou.
Pac.
Std. Brand
St. Oil Cal
St. Oil N. J
Trans. Amer.
Union Carb. -Unit.
Aircraft
U. S. Steel
. ITS';
1004
BVi
143H
34 H
35 H
144
62
55
66 H
i
S
1214
42',
34
30
66i
10',
0314
H
33
78H
43
714
I7,
'i
Sit.
ti'i
H'-i
81',
38
90',
The
Capital
Parade
(Continued from Page Ona
Conditions restored to normal on
the P. & E.. after boxcar derailed
near Eagle Point.
The Grange
Eagle Point Ornnge j
An address by W. A. Gates of Med- .
IW4 trill foot lira tha unlartslntnont
program pf Eagle Point Grange Tues
day evening, starting at 8 o'clock. In
addition to Mr. Gates' talk, his daugh
ter, Mary Ann Gates, Is arranging
presentation of several vocal and in
strumental numbers.
Taking as his subject, "Business
Man. and Farming," Mr. Gates will
stress the mutual benefit which
would accure from proper coopera
tion of buslncsa men and farmers.
Bridal, Veil Departure
NEW YOflk (AP) Lilly Dache
defied tradition recently and pro
duced one of the mcst striking wed
ding veils of the season. She de
signed It of delphinium blue chiffon
for a New York bride. The veil,
worn with a sheer white crepe
bridal gown, swung in three train
like streamers from a close-fitting
turban of the sama material. The
brldo carried delphiniums.
IS 1 Chevrolet
JINGLES
Copyrighted
Tomorrow, as we celebrate
our Independence day . , .
Let us resolve to perpetuate
our American way !
With so much of the world
torn with war and strife,
With foreign Dictators prop
aganda so rife,
Surely, WE should appre
ciate our land of the free
With the manifold blessings
given you and me!
Let's rededicate ourselves to
our Forefathers' creed
Be THEIR type of AMER
ICANS in every thought
and deed I
Chevy M. Hurd
Rogue River Chevrolet
Main and Riverside
Service Dept 32 No. Riverside
Used Car Lot Riverside at 4th
THE MIGHTIEST ADVENTURE
ROMANCE EVER FILMED!
other bureaus. The original truth
In securities law was Intended to
apply only to corporations floating
new Issues. Now the SEC la work
ing for a broad federal Incorpora
tion act. ine original securities
exchange act was Intended to apply
primarily to stock? exchanges. Now
it nas been fortified, by the Ma
loney act. to cover all securities I
aeaiers. And so It goes.
That Is why anyone who wlahes
to make a new government rule
should stop and ask himself, "How
isr no i want to go?" Rule-makers
should remember that one rule
always spawns a dozen others.
FARLEY WILL VISIT
OREGON JULY H-15
PORTLAND, July S. (API Dr. E
T. Hedlund. postmaater. aald yester-
uay tnst Postmaster-Oeneral James
A. Parley would visit Oregon July
M and IS.
Farley accompanied by his daugh
ters. Elrabeth and Ann. will sneak
at Ontario and Baker on July 14. and
visit Portland briefly on the 15th. n
route to Seattle and Alaska.
August.
'able to put u.e drafting airectly on psny dominated.
MINE COMPANY TOLD
TO REHIRE 275 MEN
WASHINOTON. July . (AP)
The labor, relations board ordered
the Sunshine Mining company. Kel
logg. Idaho, today to re-hlre 375
employes who participated In a strike
lat August
The board also ordered the min
ing company to bargain collectively
with the international unlen of mine
mill and amelter workers (C.I O l and
to disestablish the Big Creek Indu.
trial union on the ground It ma com-
Teachers Flunk
I n Pronunciation
Test At Conclave
NEW YORK. Juty . yj The
nation's school children will be
glad to know today that ten
teachers took a pronunciation test
at the National Education associa
tion's convention here and not
one made a passing grade.
Five men and five women faced
each other In a pronunciation bee
rhe men won but didn't gloat
because all of them flunked, by
rehoolroom atandards. Words like
diocese, cantatrlce, Nabucodono-
sor. and fortiori stopped both
teams dead with concerted groans.
In a apelllng bee, .14 words
downed two teams of S men and
5 women In 30 minutes flat
Harold Clark of New Tork spelled
"recalcitrance" correctly and was
the 1f one standing.
i Wtt I THRU I
IIISs; J Express... daring men I
h 'X . , , J ''glxi-g with every
k X " J 0UDCe of dl"' courage
o lild an empire.
'XkA :-J ROMANCE
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