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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1938)
PACE FOUR MEDFOfin MATT- TRTBUNE, MEDFOTW. OREGON. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 8. 1938. MEDFORDtt$feTRIBUNE "Everyone ta Soother Or RmiIi 111 Hall THItoM." Dull? Bicept Sat ar day. Publlihed by URDKURD PRINTINO CO. tl-llS No Plr St. phone I BO PORT W RDHU Bailor. BRNEHT R OILSTRAP. Manarer. An lndpndnl Newspaper. Rntarad Mcond-claw matter at Mid ford. OrEon. undct Act of March t, lift SUBSCRIPTION BATES n Mail In Advann: Dally and Sunday on yaar... , .H.M Dally and Sunday all montha.. 1. 10 Dally and Sunday thra montha 1.06 Dally and Sunday on month.. Tt Hy Oarrlar In Advanca Madford. Aih. land. Csntrat Point. Jackionvllla, Gold Hill, Roiua Rlvar. Phoenls. TalanL nd on motor roataai Dally and Sunday on yaar It.oo Dally and Sunday ona month Tft Ail tirmi caah Is artranea. OfHrlal Faprr el the City of Herlford Official Paper of Jarkaon Coooty URHHRH OP TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS Rflttog Pull I.MHMI Wire Sfrrlro Th Aaaociatad Praa la cluaivaly en tltlad to th ua for publication of all flaw dlapatrhoa erditd to It or othr w1 eradlted to thla pa par. and alae to th local nwa publtched hrln. All rlchta for public Man of pell dlapateh herein ar alto rrvd. MEMBER OK UNITED PRESS HICMBRR OP AUDIT RITRBAD OF OIRCinATIONS Nittontl Adrift lit nf fttprMtntatlraa IVC8T-B0U.IOAY COM PANT INC Offlc In N fork. Cblaafo, Detroit Sao Franciaco, ro Atigaiea, '4(11. Portland. St. Uoula Atlanta. vneouvr n r Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The annual worry over th ,u- plelon college tootbU plyer re paid lor their athletic service, how aver humble or heroic, haa started to shake varloua liutuutlona of higher learning to their foundations. To the average layman there aeema no moral turpitude Involved In the tranaaction, except, In all probability, it waan't enough. Why ahouldn't a long-legged halfback, who thrilled M.OOO people at M per head with touchdown run b financially re warded. The aame amount of physi cal and mental effort, In the politi cal field, would find the gentleman ahackled to a (19,000 Job, and a government Umoualnc to drag him to It. Der Runtafuehrer Hitler Sunday barked cheerful defiance to the de mocracies of the world, and threat ened them with peaoa. HARMONIOUS HORROB (New Yorker) "MaaaJIro KoJIme, an official author employed by tha Jan v panese government, writing In the Osaka Malntchl Shlmbun, commented favorably on tha de atructlon of Shanghai: "The thor oughneaa with which tbay (the bulldtnge) were wrecked really enraptured me.' ha remarked. They are undoubtedly a poem of destruction'." e e Tha treasury department plana a . conference with artist on tha de al ema and durability of the 11000 bllla. They should laat aa long as It takee to get hold of ona. Edison Marshall ' who scribble for the "slick paper" magazine la here visiting. Old timers recall hla youth tiereabouta, when he parted hla name In tha middle, and signed It I. Tenia Marshall. a a "The two will be seen together at tha danoa tonight aa will Emerald Editor Paul Deutachmann and his . . . well, anyway , , , stlBabeih Ann Jones." (Oregon Dally Emerald) The deft touch! e 'TARMERS TJROI REMOVAL OF HIDES" (Del Norte (Calif.) Tripll rate) Cruel and unusual, and It don't seem right. e a PS: DON'T MEAN MAYBE! (I.lhby (Mont.) Western News) "I quit. I have been trying to aell tha Oylear house for six weeka and no one will buy It. Have been keeping the lawn cut and watered have picked th rosea and berrlea and lost out on my fishing waiting for a buyer to come. Now If you want this houae. Just com up and get the key. I am not trying to aell It from here on J. W. Barrett." A number of editors confess their Inability "to understand the mad apendlng." Many understand the apendlng, but dont know why they ahould be mad. London reporta the late king, the Duke of Windsor, who abdicated hla throne, may return to Britain. "Presumably he might find some emrt of occupation her," the dla pateh adds. "At long last' . . , A resident of Eugene reports the theft of an auto containing a f!ut Th culprit ahould not drive th flute across the slate line, or federal authorities will be sfter him. ' Holes-ln-one,' bridge game pnres and fish, made, won and caught today, will be recorded aa of Monday or Wednesday. a a Blcycllsta are comhattlng the first winter's chill, with their hsnda In their pockets, and off tha handle bars. In case of an accident, there fx the humiliating prospect of ren dering first aid hy cutting off the psnta to get the broken arm out of the pocket. et Wage. Hour Confab PORTLAND, Nov. (AP.) Ore gon employera and employee uncer tain about the operation of th fed eral wage and hour act will receive firat hand Information and Inatruc tlon here November 90 when Klmer P Andrews, th administrator, hold a conference). Its Up to You, Mr. Voter IF you do not vote today and if unfit candid cos are elected to office, you must carry your share of the responsibility for such results. If you do not vote and if worthy bcilot measures are de feated while dubious ones are carried, you will be to blame. Make no mistake about this: .Special groups and special interests seeking to elect their own special candidates and govern the course of ballot legislation will get out their votes and such votes will be cast. The way to offset that the only effective way is for citizens who have no axes to grind, but only the public interest to promote, to get out and vote. ITf E have in Oregon this year the heaviest voter registration on record. That may indicate an aroused public interest. It also may indicate a herding of voters by interests seeking to promote tboir own ends. Herded votes are not likely to be cast unselfishly in the publio interest. The way to offset them is for unselfish citizens who comprise the great majority of voters to go to the polls and It is not only a right but "a Any who fail to do it today complain that unfit candidates on ballot measures are not in Polls are open everywhere from 8 A. M. to 8 P. 31. Vote. "0ES tho above have a familiar sound f-If you-happen to be an old subscriber no go to the polls and vote has been printed in this column, every election day for more years than we care to mention. Nevertheless the above is neither a reprint nQr a rehash. In fact it is brand new and was taken bodily from this morn ings Oregonian. It only goes to show that no matter how newspapers may differ before and after elections, they are practically unanimous when it comes to the duty that confronts all good citizens on election day. Vote for Barbour! 117E trust we won't be accused of disregarding the Corrupt " Practice Act, if we make a few remarks on today's election, in New Jersey. Not only is our circulation in New Jersey very limited, but by the time this paper is off the press, the polls in the big mosquito state should be closed. But you never can tell. For our remarks have to do with boss ilague the Hitler of Jersey City, and if he should win (as usual) in today's election, brass-knuckle fist of his will Not so many years iy0 Adolph was an unknown agitator, pounding the tables in various and sundry 3Iunich beer halls, with not a fraction of the political powef Boss Ilague enjoys along the west bank of tile lower Hudson river, today. And no matter how obscure opposed the ex-paperhangcr then, it was promptly liiiiidiited when Der Feubrer came into So, to repeat, you never can llf ARREN BARBOUR, former U. S. Senator trying to stage " a comeback, is the candidate fighting the Ilague machine, and evory believer in good government prays that he will win. For his defeat will be the defeat of American democracv and another feather in the cap of dictatorship, which is a far more tk. : i. tciu uiuiuuuiBui ever juts Deen or ever win De. So here is a telepathic thought wave in the general direction of the New Jersey voters, may they mark a ballot for Senator Barbour, and throw The Hague Into the sewage swamps near Bayonne where he belongs I In the long view of things, the New Jerspy election is the most important test of American citizenship, being made in the country today. May the worst menace in American public life, get what'g coming to him 1 Death Report Exaggerated A RENT some of these Eastern columnists a bit premature? Like so many stampeded sheep they are following their bell-wether, Walter Lippmnnn, and proclaiming the end of the British Empire. Of if not the absolute end, the end of British hegemony in Europe, and the virtual elimination of the British fleet, as a determining force in world affairs. We can't see it. Which doesn't mean necessarily it isn't true, but we do maintain, that on a factual basis, the Lippmnnn ease has not as yet been established. COR what is that ease! Essentially this: that because Germany and Italy were too strong in the air for England and France in October, 19,18, the latter at Munich yielded to force and fear, and (iermany was given virtually a carte blanche to do as she wished in Czechoslovakia. And because of this surrender, Japan dared to disregard British Hongkong, capture Canton, and in three short weeks, complete the conquest of China. "CONCEDING for the sake of argument, the truth of these claims, what does that prove t That the democracies of Europe are through, the totalitarian governments supreme, and there is nothing between Japan-(Jerniany. Italy, and a joiiqtiered world, ixeept the United Stalest That is praetieally what all the high-priced columnists are saying, as they endorse President. Roosevelt's super-navy pro gram, but where they got their fact's to support such a thesis, is more than this column ran understand. yiU'E England and France were bluffed out at Munich, but what are they doing today t Both of them engaged in bringing up their air fleets to fighting strength at the earliest possible moment. Qf course (iermany .and Italy won't be '.die meanwhile, hut does any informed authority deny, that when it comes to an armament race in the air, or under it, the democracies, in both financial and material resources, will hsve all the best of itt And if Hitler should break his word, to seek no further territorial concessions in Europe, and try to gobble up Knmani.i and the Ukraine, does anyone doubt England and France, probably with the support of Soviet Russia, would yo lo war to prevent it T And such a war being essentially a war of i ndurauce, how could the democracies LObEt vote. duty of good citizenship to vote. will have no right afterwards to have been elected or that results tho best public interest. doubt it does for an appeal to there is no telling how far that subsequently extend. the German newspaper that power. tell. corrupt politics and Fascist genuine danger to this country . . Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be anawered by Or. Brady, If a stamped self addressed envelope la enclosed. Utters should b brief' and written In Ink Owing to the bug number of letter received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, tn El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. SOMERSAULTS, 8AOO When I iay I roll a dozen or more somersault every morning. elwaya keeping personal contact with the "3 floor notwith standing W eb ster'i definition of somersault, I express the sim ple faith of a therapeutic ni hilist. I'm telling you I b e 11 e t e dally somersault ing Is good for what alia most civilized, seden tary folk. I even Ko Into detail about It. in the monograph "Invita tion to the Somersaultauqua" Illustrated by brother Andy's gifted son lrancls Brady. Geneva artist and any render may have a copy on request, If he or she Incloses a three cent stamped envelope berrlng the correct address. Recently some routine grimaces, lip. mouth, throat, eye, nose, scalp and car exercises were described here, for persons sffected with catarrhal or progressive deafness. Incidentally they Improve facial expression. As stated this Is the routine: First contract the muscles about the Hps and mouth In a combina tion smile "and whew, and hold that position for several seconds until the muscles feel slightly tired. Then contract muscles about the ncstrlls and hold that grimace for several seconds In the same way. Then contract muscles about the eyes, ditto. Then forehead, cheeks and temples, ditto. Finally contract or try to contract muscles that draw back the ears or wiggle the ears, ditto. While keeping the ear retrac tor muscles contracted and your ears drawn back or up thereby, try to contract the muscles In your throat to put throat in the'' position to sound tha "k" when you ssy hike, In imagination and hold the "k" position for a few seconds. Repeat the whole series of facial exercises systematically and no fool ing, before your mirror, every night and every morning. In private. Such exercise tends to keep the pan from going taggy. Improves expression, and In many instances not only re tards the progress of deafness but actually Improves the hearing to a considerable degree. I have described the routine as well as I can. If it isn't clear, drop in whenever you're in the nelghbor- Man About Manhattan Bv GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK.I am not a man tor prolonged farewells. When the hour of parting comes I like to take It on the run. i want to be reaching for my hat when the goo d-b yes are mumbled, for there Is no sense In dawdling over a hand In which you are not gen uinely Interest ed. It distresses you too much when you are be ing separated from loving friends. feEORGt IUCKt Most of New York holds a dif ferent view than this. It must. At least is certainly goes In for bon voy ages In a big way. I have seen moth ers, and daughters, husbands and wives, lovers and sweethearts stuff themselves Into tho small room of a ship and aginlw for hours before the a!l-a.hore bell is rung. I have seen people so genuinely moved by emotion that speech was impossible, and yet they would not or could not tenr themselves away. Why should this be? The answer is that, without knowing it. some peo ple pet a bo?t out of suffering. I do not infer that their tears aren't sin cere; thry axe as honest as the dews from heaven. But they hang on to the last second, rocked by sobs, fre quently Incoherent In their final protestations of love and devotion. On a recent midnight I had oc casion to take in a .sailing and I arrived at mv destination Just in time to hear a mother scream: "Oh. my baby, my darling bsby boy!" Then she fainted. The baby. I was able to ascertain shortly after that, was a 93-ycsr old six-footer with a happy prtn on, his face and a bright eyed - bride on his arm. They were off for a European honey-moon, btit mother ws ready for a sanitarium. My pM who was billeted In the next stateroom had been enjoying himself, he ssid, for three hours. They hsd been there since ft o'clock, weoping themelva into a state of insensibility. And then agsln yesterday I went down to the ;ratn to siy (toodbye to a friend. She was leaving on the JOth century limited, heading fr Chicago. p. m. Other friends t the ciepnrtlng one arrived by twos snd thrres until there ws qult a ' -v-ny Catherine. Tfcen the gates opened and we all piled atvnrd the car. The bags were uvard Into the drawing room. Every rvxiy was excited, trvitv to jwv some thing. The moment w were all In the room that atmosphere of tad ness which sttrnds all farewells be uan to manifest Itself. 3 I mumbled . hurried e-xyibve and broke for the tmnway. I Ml there alone 1A mln uts. vntil the train N-sen to move The others came piling off then, but I have never seen ao desolate or forlorn a croup There were manv unashamed t-r. One jir! 1 ed bv such a paroxvfm of ?3bs thit she could not speak. We stood in I; Brady, M P. ING AND DEAFNESS I hood and 111 show you how to make ; faces. That li. If you are in earnest ! about it. Once I told a women's club about the benefits to be derived from somersaults. Many of the wo men pretended they would like to try It but they dldn t know Just h w to go about It, and wonldn t I show 'em. X showed 'em. But not a Jams. nay not so much as a damse', could I persuade to try It. Not unlikely, the first time a se date individual past fort) phylobg loally) tries somersaults he or she will make an awful Hop. hut with perseverance one will learn to do a neat roll, forward or backward even without using the hands at all. It . well to remove hitlrpins, corset steels, bustlea, and take out your pistes and a small accident Insur ance policy before you begin rolling, It you're extremely brittle. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Lambert Treatment for Alcoholism Please send our , doctor, whose name and address Is on the envelope Inclosed, necessary Information so that he may administer the lAm bert treatment for alcoholism. (Mrs. H. 8.) . . Answer Dr. . Lambert published the full details cf the treatment In the Jour A.M.A. Sept. 39, 1909, and Feb. 9, 1910. If files of this period ical are not available, a physician will find a good working abstract of the method in Forchhelmer'a "Ther epusla of Internal Disease" (Apple tons ) Vol. II, p. 693. I have seen the Lambert treatment restore absolute ly worthless Inebriates to sobriety and Industry. Any physician can ad minister this treatment anywhere, provided he has full control of the patient for two or three weeks and the cooperation of all concerned. Flesh Eating Please advise regarding the risk in volved In eating chicken if the fowl has had a growth tn soma organ, or meat If the animal has had some disease? (R. E. R.) Answer If the meat Is thorough ly cooked, there la no risk In any circumstances. Much beef la from cattle that had tuberculosis. What of It, if the meat Is cooked. Rare or raw meat Is not so safe. (Copyright 1938, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Jiott: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D.. 26ft El Camlno. Beverly HUH. Calif. stunned silence, and then broke up Into twos and threes. I drifted on out Into Vanderbllt avenue. Aa I walked along the atreet. It seemed to me that I had never seen the stars so sad. And so I want no part of long and enduring au revolrs. To me the extra dance Is not worth the fiddle. When It Is time to separate I want to say, "So long. Joe" and then get out of there. At least you eren't left In such a daze that you can't see the taxlcabs coming at you when you cross the street. Communications Favors Oblique Parking To The Editor: Before 1 left Oregon I allocated to a traffic cop In Mertford that I be lieved It would be wise In parking automobile In oblique parking to have them go to the curb backward, t have recently found a city which haa been using that method for two ycara. ! aeked several driven how they liked It. All were warm In their praise. Parallel parking la submitted to aa a necessity because of narrow streets: could not the difficulty be better meet by allowing oblique parking on only one side? Almost aa many cars would be accommodated. Sangertiea haa a very narow atreet through which a XJ. S. highway paasc. They tried parking, on one aide, but the merchant on the opposite side raised such a howl the plan was abandoned. Could that objection be met by changing the aides at atated Intervals? Cleveland, O.. haa the queerest way for two cars to pass when they meet at a cross atreet and both wish to turn to the left. Jt la too complei for me to attempt the description, but Cleveland la the only city In the U. 8. that uaes tt, ao they told me. Topeka, Kan., alao atands alon, ao far aa my observations goes, in hav ing a very ahort Interval between changes of color for the stop lights. I could barely walk acroaa a wlae street. I often failed. The lovely maple color ar about done. A whit froat thla morning was followed by a very lovely day. VM. M. CARLE. Sangertiea. N. T. The Grange' BelHIew O ran re Bellevlew young Oranirers will be host to Young Grancers Auxiliary of Jackson county at Bellevlew Orange hall Wednesday at 8 p. m. To met more Oranners and In ereas" attendance, the meeting will start a membership drive In the f.-vr m of a con test be t wee n the Grangers In the northern part of the county a?aint those In th .southern division. The side which accounts for the msjorlty of mem hers present from now until the last December meeting will be entertain ed by the losing members. A new program of recreation has been planned whereby members will have a chance to learn and lead d if f eren t ar 1 1 vtt lea, ew Just en Joy them. Refreshments will be served tit the entertaining ycurg Granger. Evfrrone alwava has a good time at BeleTipw. I'm Mali Trlbun Want Ada. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS MILK consumption in Oregon is decreasing, and A. E. Engbret son, member of the milk control board, thinks sales of Intoxicating liquor have something to do with the decrease. Well, maybe so. It will have to be admitted that the money that is spent for liquor ISN'T spent tor milk. In cases when there la only so much money, and a choice has to be made. milk sales HAVE to suffer If the choice favors liquor. In all probability, there are such cases. (Intoxicating liquor, like gambling, seems to be an evil that we have to put up with. We don't appear to be able to get along with the stuff, and yet it looks as if we can't get along without It. Prohibition wasn't so wonderful). II R. ENOBRETSON adds that other i factors contributing to the de cline of milk consumption tn Ore gon are "general economic condi tions, continued labor unrest and an increase In fluid milk substitutes." What he doesn't add la that the milk business Is rigidly controlled by law, with resulting rather high prices. High prices always tend to cut down consumption. 11THAT is happening in Oregon, as " to milk. Isn't true of Oregon only. Throughout the United States, the storage supply of dairy products Is the LARGEST IN HISTORY. And over the country aa a whole consumption Is decreasing, Just as tt is in Oregon. In August of thla year, consumption of dairy products reach ed the lowest point since 1933. In 1933. average consumption of milk In this country was 40.1 quarts per person per year. It la now EIGHT QUARTS LESS than that, or only 33.1 quarts per person. WHAT ti happening in the case of dairy products Is undoubtedly happening In the oaae of other foods. People are eating less of them peclslly the higher priced ones. Why? Your answer to that question is as good as anybody's, for no one knowa for aiire, but the probable reason is that people haven't aa much money to spend aa they used to have In the better days before we started In to reform everything In sight. When people don't have as much to spend, they have to do without things. 4 New Books New books at the Jackson county library Include: Fiction Costaworth, Hera X Stay; De Jong, Old Haven: Du Maurler. Rebecca; Giejerstsm, Storevlk; Greene, A Deeper Root; Gunnsrsson. Ships in the Sky; Hare. English Rue; Leslie, Concord In Jeopardy; Lucas. Old Motley; Nelson, On Sarpy Creek; Prouty, Lisa, Vale; Selfert. Young Doctor Galahad: Stern. The Ugly Dachshund: Tate. The Fathers. Non-Fiction Aldrlch, Babies Are Human Beings; Thompson. Polltial Guide; Thomp son, Refugees: Anarchy or Orirant ration?; Drew, How To Pasa Radio License Examinations; Carmer, The Hurricane's Children: H o g b e n. Science for the Citizen; Sears, This ts Our World; Lindbergh, Listen! the Wind: Du Puy, The Natlon'a Forest; Furnas. Man. Bread and Destiny; Gardner, The Book of Original Plays and How To Give Them; Lewis, Rid Ing; Mantle, The Best Plays of 1937 1938. and the Year ' Book of the Drama In America. Russell, The Living Torch: Nixon. Vagabond Voyaging: Nock. A Journey Into Rabetlaa'a France; Lewis, The Big Four; Bartlett, Intermission In Europe; Hawthome, The Memoirs of Julian Hawthorne: Hindus. Green Worlds; Thomas, Slngln' Fiddler of Lost Hope Hollow; Ekman, Jean Sibelius: Duffus. Lillian Wald, Neighbor and Crusader; Osktson, Tecumseh and His Times; Buck, Vik ings of the Sunrise. Pamphlets U. 8. Department of the Interior: 1. School use of visual aids. U. S. Department of Agriculture; 1. Facte about cotton. 2. Soil de fense In the south. 8. Home canning of fruits, vegetables and meats. 4. Grading dressed turkeys. 5. Porcu pine control in the western state. 8. Erosion on roads and adjacent lanria. 7. Soil-depleting, soil-eonserr-Ing and soll-buildlng crops. 8. Le gume in soil conservation. OS A C. Experiment Station: 1. PMato diseases In Oregon and their control. 3. Corn drying. 8. Dried Italian prune product. 4. Coat and efficiency in fiber flax production in the Willamette valley, Oreeon. 8. Barley production In Oregon. 6. The Willamette valley farm kitchen. Engineer Named MOSCOW. Idaho. Nov. 8 (API U R. Stockman. Bsker, Ore., was nam ed consulting engineer by the city council last night for a sewage dis posal plant remodrling for which a 0.000 bond Issue was recentlv passed and a fja.000 PWA grant approved Pioneer l.nmberman TMes CLATSKANII. Or . Nov. S (A P 1 A pioneer lumberman. O. J. Erenron 70. the originates of the picturesque. cigr-haped rafta which hauled thousands cf board feet of timber snd finished lumber down tha Pa cific coast, died here yesterday. , I'm stall Trtbus Want Ad. The Capital Parade " (Continued from Pag On ) Th prealdent now think that the subsequent course of th New York struggle haa confirmed hla expecta tions. What is more, he aee parat lela to the New York ituatlon In many states. He will have a almpl answer to defeated democrat who have made gestures to conservative voters. It will be, "You should have had the courage of my conviction." There's much to be said for the president' theory on strategy, and much against. The Important fact remains that he incerely believe the voters retain their old enthusiasm for the New Deal. Nothing but an un locked for political upheaval la likely to shake hla belief. In vlewof that fact, his speech on Friday galna added Interest. Indeed, hla belief In the continuing popular ity of the New Deal may be held responsible for the speech's moat significant passages that In which he Insisted on "reasonable continuity In liberal government," and that in which he firmly asserted govern ment's responsibility to step in when private enterprise fall "to keep the national conveyor belt moving." Of theae pasaagea, the second un doubtedly represents another ahlft In position toward tha political left. The "failures" of private enterprise will be precisely the subject of the forth coming monopoly investigation. The all but Inescapable conclusion la that, when the Investigation haa exposed those "failures." the president will advocate still greater extensions of government enterprise. Aa yet, the shift In position remain vague and 111 defined. Th leftward atep may be retraced If the election return cause serious concern. But It Is clear that the president la contemplating no more "breathing spella." aa bus iness men use the term. Aa for the presidents remarks about "reasonable continuity In liberal government," the third term Implica tion haa already been widely observ ed. Perhaps the Implication la not so strong as tt seems. Yet it Is Justi fiable to auppoae the president was hinting that. If hla party Insist on supplanting him with another Taft, or If the republicans have some chance of electing another Harding, he will take th field again In 1940. Among New Dealer, third term senti ment haa grown atronger week by week through recent montha. Even those closest to him do not now the president' own attitude to ward a third term. They apend a good deal of time guessing, "does he want It, or doesn't he?" But they know pretty well what he feara. He does not look for the repeal of any of the great measures he has sponsored. He simply predict that. If he la auc ceeded by a conservative, hla great measures will relapse Into the same administrative coma aa overtook Wil son's federal trade commission under Harding and Coolldge. He Is fond of citing the example of the trade commission In hla private talk. Of course, the election will go far toward testing the realism or unreal Ism of his present mood. That he will not relent In hla fight for liberal ization of hi party: that h la de termined to Insure "reasonable con tinuity In liberal government" theae things now seem certain. It remain for the voter to decide whether hla Intentions can be translated Into achievement. Ye Poets Corner (By Fred Alton Height) Of course, on election day You never can tell: Yet, all candidates for offlc Might learn this lesson well: That while they can fool and Ignore some of the common people all of the time; And all of the common peopl some of the time: They cannot fool and Ignore all of the common people all of the time; For all men are leveled to an qul SCOT At th poll, aa on tha hill, and In the flve-and-ten cent store. True Leave, of Autumn' Autumn haa arrived with leaves of red and gold. Ah! The wind cornea whistling by to twist the stems from their firm hold. But the leaves rejoice for they are ready for their ride through October a kles; They go Joyfully to the death when King winter cruelly ump out their beautiful dyes. How like a mortal la a leaf when one haa reached tha Fall and Autumn of life. For after all life la but four mys terious seasons which cut the timid like a knife. And who does not believe that th Fall, that th Autumn Is the most beautiful season of llf. When you and I and all can reap the golden harvest, the golden hr- veet of life: Drink In each rich abundant ol what haa been and might. Tr.ua do we prepare for th, winter and th night. By Lou Oay Kniggel. Age IS. WEATHER STRIP for Your Door and Window , , BIG PINES LUMBER CO. PHONE 1 Flight o' Time Medford nd Jackson Count; history from the file at th Mall Tribune 10 and to year ago- ' TEN VEABS AGO TODAY November S. IMS (It was Thursday) Hoover receive the greatest elec tors! vot ever ccorded a preidn ttal oandtdat. Al Smith forswear further ctlvlty In politic. Rainy weather holda up work so new fairground road. Biversld avenue starts mov for new Mreet light, th aame a Sixth atreet. Petition to pave Park street filed with council. Valley Democrat stunned by ac curacy of Literary Dlgeat straw vot, and Texaa going Republican. Local Texan vowa he will never again re turn to hla natlva heath. City to celebrate Armistice day with . greatest program and pared In history. Medford snd Ashland football game main sport event, ex cite wide Interest. TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY November 8. lBlg (It waa Friday) Nation la hoaxed by falsa report of the signing of an armistice end ing the World war. Many celebration started before truth revealed. No Democrat were elected to of fice In Multnomah county In laat election. Allied troops continue advance on Weatem .front, while world waits for answer to peace terms sent by Gen eral Foch. French declare there will be no cessation of hostilities until Germans driven from France; Prea ldent Wilson will announce signing of armistice; Mall-Tribune will pot bulletins Sunday on the war crlala. Herbert Hoover, food administrator, to leave for Europe to direct feeding of pedple in reclaimed areas of France. PRINCE OF PRUSSIA GIVEN PRISON TERM BERLIN. Nov. 8. (AP) Prince Frederick Leopold of Prussia today waa sentenced to two yeara impris onment on a charge of immorality. The prince, 43 years old, is the son of the late Prince Frederick Leo pold who was a second cousin of the former kaiser. How To fand A Salmon ROCKAWAY, Nov. 8 fU.P.) Hat old Heath solved the problem of land ing a 40-pound Chinok salmon with out a gaff after the flah wriggled free In shallow water. Heath's com panion, Dave Hackett, plunged Into the water and emerged with the sal mon in hla hands. r - - Chevrolet J$ JINGLES Copyrighted I wouldn't b much of & politician, I'm afraid Hand-shaking, baby-kissing; couldn't make the grade 1 The kind of "babies" I'd probably have on MV knee Would start my wife out with a gun, looking for me! There's too much "bunk" in the political game some inefficient job hunters you have to tame! No siree I'd rather stick to the job I have Selling Chevrolets don 't have to dish out the salve! Chevy M. Hurt! Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Rlversld service Dept. 3J .north Rlversld I'sed Car Lot Riverside at Kb Eat Our 100 "WHEAT GERM" For Youthful Health 6TH AND FIB n I V v III v J J