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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1938)
PAOE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRTBUNTv MEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. DECEM"BER 6. 1938. MedfordWTribune "Bvaryona In Rnnlhrrn OrrgoB RMdi th Mull TrlbuM." Dally Rxrrpt Haturdsy. Publliti4 br MEDtTORD PRINTINO CO. II tf'Sft No. Kir St. phon tl ROBfcftT W. RIIHU e-lltof. ERNEST R 0IL8TR AP, Utntff. Ad lnaipnrtnt Nwppr. Entered eond'Cltn matter at Mt4 lord. Orason, under Act of Marco I. Ill BUUSCKIPTIUN RATIO j Mall In Advanca: Dally and flunrtny ona year 18.00 Piily and Sunday ati month... I 0 Dally and Sunday three montha. 1.00 Dally and Sunday ona month Tl By Carrier In Advance Medford. Aeh land. Central Point. Jacksonville, Gold Hill, Rogue River. Phoenli. Talent and oo motor routaa: Dally and Sunday one year It. 00 Dally and Sunday on month Tt All terma canh In advance. OfNc.it. Taper nf thr City of Hertford Ofllrtiil Paper of Jut Itenn County H KM II KR OF TUB AHSOI'I ATFD PHKHS ReralTlng Toll l.eawd IVIrt Hervlre. The Aeaoclated Preaa le exclusively en titled to the uie for publication of all aewa dlipntchea credited to ft or other wle credited to thle paper, and alao to Uia local newa published herein. All right a for publication or apaclal dlapatchea herein are also raeervad. UKHltBh OK UNITED PRESS MKUBBR UP AUDIT I1UREAU OP CIRCULATIONS ' Advertising KepreRentatlvaa KEST-HOU.IIIAV COMPANY INC. Office tn New York. Chicago, Detroit. San Prancieco, Los Angela, Seattle, Portland. BU Louis. Atlanta. Vancouver. Ye Smudge Pot n Arthur Prry j Tha itate faces ft low of 1 teen so MtintiM aa nrosntctlve brides nnd groomi balk at the new marrlim law and hie elaewnero w do imuu cuffed. How to halt the trend Is ftpt est ha a ororjlom ior ine icKiainniro A ch bounty nan own mnwu . mi nnrh. ft might result In . .. Af hinH hnlrllncr enunlea ex tending from the oourthoumw to the foothills. : The campus forces opposed to ' drum majorettes have not yet launched a campaign ir lunger jhwi ties for basketball players. ANTI-CMMAX (Entrrpriae (Ore.) Chieftain) "Mrs. O. D. Shaver was noti fied last week that she was a winner of one of the SVnlth radios In the seventh week of the Preferred Stock vacuum pack ed coffee radio contest. She pre sented her letter at Borland's gtwery and received the radio. Her prize wag won by her convincing statement of the su periority of this brand of coffee and why the family prefers It. "Mrs. Shaver never drinks oof fee." e e The movement to have Secy. Ickes run for Mayor of Chlcnfpo Is re ported "alnlng momentum." The concensus of opinion holds, If Chi sago Insists, It will serve her right, e "The project Includes the demol ishing of the Salem School . . . and the salvaging of materials to be used en the sponsor." (Ok land (Calif.) Tribune) Don't sound proper, e e ' AnnictTiruttB notr (Klpley (Kan.) News) "The other afternoon an Iowa farmer took all his clothes off and threw them In the well and then climbed a tall tree In his backyard and set In singing hymns. A farmer would have to be crney to sing these days, but not necessarily that crony." a Democratic chieftains fear a re turn to the days of 103(1-1930. They were terrible. Truckdrlvers were get ting SI0 a day, and only gangatera were at war. There were no Hitlers or Mussollnls, and wise men talked of plans to outlaw International strife. The President preached econ omy, and the p-.iO wie doing the erMTirltna, lnata1 of the iinvernment fining ; nr tNm. e , S'vrnl ri;i?4na wearing (toshl How I hm v i.o HI pTPTfMl-ins. have Wt tiir. pat ten fla for the sn Tlr -.nn of lod Antrim. "There seems to be no way out of his eternal rilIemma-etnrvatton be cause there Is not enough food, star vation became we have tfo much to eat.M (Emporia (Kan.) Oazetts) Man, the "lord of Creation," has further grounds to strut and boast. t An Nom.R NArim'irM "He Is entering the race 'Just fol tae opportunity It affords ma to bs sociable and toll lies. His announce ment continues: "'In getting In the race I am not only giving my friends a chance to vote for, hut all my enrmlra ft chance to vote Hgalnit mt. If you have a grudge against me, I want to give you a chance to get It out of your ay5tm and forget all about It as quickly as possible. " (Doerun (Oa ) Courier) Add nohte aacrlflces Mill Herelvrr- Named MATtaHPiEi.n, Dec. o John Ferguson, Marshfleld, was named tem porary receiver today for the Empire Lumber company after ft hearing be fore Judge J. T. Ilrand on ft petition from Charles Oram, elate labor com mlsMoner, for ft receivership to aafe gard assets to cover 120.000 in labor claims, 4 . Thieves Mls Turae COnV ALLlfl, Ore, Dec. -iP Thlcvr who broke Into the home of I W. A. Jensen. Oregon state college executive secretary, took an estimated j 500 tn clothing, household good and Jnwrla, but overlooked pun con taining Considerable money on ft (.lint; U mo rot Poo Late to Clas alfj Ads 1 1.30 p. ox. Taft and Roosevelt Now Agree! COLUMN-LEFT in this morning' Oregonian it very in teresting. "Liberals must carry on, declares Chief Executive," is the 2-col. headline; and under it is a picture of Senator-Elect Robert Taft of Ohio presenting a T. R. bicuspid grin to the bland and unctious Senator Vandenberg of Michigan, declaring as he does so : "The Republicans will have to nominate a Liberal to win." There you have it ladies and gentlemen I The leader of the Democratic party, and a probable leader of the Republican party two years hence, agreeing as to the course this country should pursue in the immediate future, a liberal course. OF course one might ask here for a definition of "a liberal course," but we shall pass that up for the present, to observe that after much noise and fury, the two major parties are together, as far as major objectives are concerned. Taft and Roosevelt will, of course, differ as to the proper route to take to reach the promised land, but they will not differ as to the general character of the goal. The Old Guard conservatives, with their fears and alarms, their Liberty Leagues and Union Club manifestos, may still be all dressed up, but they certainly have no place to go. And the hide-bound, copper-riveted reactionaries in the Democratic fold are no better off, or only slightly so. So whatt JUST this, a point which incidentally, has been frequently stressed in this department, since President Roosevelt's inauguration. Thanks to Roosevelt's vision, courage and aggressiveness, the country has advanced at least a generation, socially and politically speaking, in half a dozen years. In spme directions F. D. R. tried to go too fast and too far, and on at least two fronts was decisively beaten; but barring these interruptions his progress was consistently forward, and will so continue until the close of his term. A ND this is the interesting " Principles and policies that five or six years ago, so horrified some of the pillars of the Republican party that they took up their permanent residence in Bermuda, and others less stable emotionally jumped out of ten-story windows; are now taken for granted and accepted as desirable, not only by New Dealers, but by the leadership of the Grand Old Party, the opposition, if you please,, the Tafts, the Bartons, the Simpsons and their kind. Our prediction is the Republican party, under such leader ship, has more than an even chance of returning to power in 1940. But what a different party than it was in 1932, a party renovated, rejuvenated and rehabilitated, and the leader of the Democratic party the opposition the Honorable Franklin Delano Roosevelt, can take entire credit for the reformation. Thus after much wandering, much bickering and caterwaul ing, the two major parties halt for breath at the same station, one from going too fast, the other from going too slow, and the net gain for the country, is a new world for an old one! Its Up to the C . O. QO the C. I. 0. is going to fight the anti-picknting law just passed in Oregon, both in the courts and the congress at Washington. Well if the law is unconstitutional, as John L. Lewis claims, let the fact be established legally and the measure automatically becomes null and void. No one wishes to wasle time over something that is unconstitutional. But if it isn't, then the C. I. against the wind as try to secure repeal of the measure in Oregon. For this bill was passed by a 50,000 majority, and public opinion is solidly and aggressively behind it. flOWKVER, it is not true, as the C. I. 0. agitators claim, that the people were deluded regarding the character of the measure, or that the victory represented an effort to destroy union labor, in this state. As this column repeatedly pointed out during the campaign, the people of this state were organized labor. They are not right of collective bargaining. strikes, as a remedial weapon, when other mothods of securing BUT they ARE opposed to labor lawlessness and labor rac IrnlAAriniy Thnv am nnniued tn lflhnr tvrnnnv And tWpin. tion. They are opposed to any faction or minority in this state, labor or capital, having the effrontery to set itself above the law, and tell the people what they can, and what they can not do I In short, it was no diabolical capitalists or venal Big Business, that put over this so-called "anti-labor" legislation, it was what iU leadership did and tried "Economic Royalists" but the bosses, the Rossers, the Becks, the Minskis and the Iximskis, were and are solely responsible. IF the better element, and the truly REPRESENTATIVE element of organized labor had controlled labor policies and tactics in this state there would bill suggested, or if one had been reached first base. But when the labor leaders this stato, to do this and so, or ELSE, II That was a very different was the result. EXTREME! . Ym somowhM, t i v iiu-, mm mil ii x-iii7 i! v T"p,vu nir kmii Mirrii such tactics ar a thing of the rnst'"PllM'c opinion in this state will continue to support such k'K'ilntion, ns it ditl on November 8th, Chief enemies of the lowsr Colo rado River authority are woodpeckers that peck hole in the pniea and crossbars ol high tension wires. point: 0. might just as well whistle a vote of the people, with over not and ARE not, opposed to opposed to the fundamental They are not even opposed to on the part of orgnnized labor, justice, fail. plot on the part of the sordid ORGANIZED LABOR itself to do in this state. Not the labor goons and strong arm have been no anti-picketing offered it would never have! j started to tell the people of! to acquiesce in this or that, ' story and the anti-picketing bill but the conditions wfre A survey Indicates thst seven South Carolinians left that atat for every iMitMer who movM in during the decsds from 1020 to 1930. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal hesllb and byglene, not to d Usage diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If tamped seif ad dressed envelope ts enclosed Letters should be brief sod written la Ink Owing to the large number of letters received only few rsn bs answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instractlons. Address Dr. lYUIIam Drsdy, 265 El Cam I no, Beverly Hills, Csllf. CONSTIPATION HABIT Principal explanation for the poor health or under par condition, the lack of vita or the consciousness of being "not sick yet not vary well," which the periodic physical or heslth exam ination reveals tn Uie great ma jority of people, Is In my opinion prolonged, hab- ltual, perhaps lifelong shortens of calcium, phos phorus, vitamin D and vitamin B complex. It Is virtually Impossible to get an optimal dally ration of sunshine vitamin D from natural food that Is. food natural for people of our time and race. Possibly people who live largely on fish "mny get suffi cient vitamin D from the body fat and the liver oil of fish. People who consume unusually large amounts of fresh butter, cream, fresh whole mils: and fresh eggs, may get nearly enough sunshine vitamin D from these, the only sources of vitamin D In the ordinary diet of children In America. Certainly people who consume more than the usual amount of canned salmon and sar dines get mors vitamin D than those who do not use these foods. But even in these exceptional circum stances It Is now recognized by nu trition Authorities thst not only In fants, but young children and adoles cents up to the age of 18 years almost Invariably suffer from inade quate Intake of vitamin D. I have endeavored to explain here In earlier talks that, to my mind, this prolonged moderate deficiency In dally Intake of vitamin D tends to make youths In America unstable, how it accounts for the national characteristic of "weak nerves." The vitamin B complex shortage, from which nearly everybody on ord inary refined civilized diet suffers more or less. Is more specifically responst bl e for every bod y 's cons tl -patlon habit and colon derangement the latter Is too often called "colitis" although the Idea that there Is Inflammation of the colon Is an error. Wheat germ, the portion of the wheat kernel which Is carefully de moved and discarded (used largely for animal feed) in the modern mill Man About Manhattan By OROROE TUCKER NEW YORK You'll recall, of course, the story about the vaude ville hoofer with the trained seal who was out of work so long that when he fl nelly did get i Job the seal had forgotten how to swim and drowned. Now comes Al Jolson with this anecdote of ths prizefight man ager who sat across the table from him at restaurant the fctORGE tuckm other night. "How's tricks? entiiusod Jolson, shaking hands, "how's the fight gams treating you these days?" "Business Is so bad," walled the guy, "that when my man Is taking a terrific beotlng I have to throw in a PAPER, towel.' Toscaninl Is noted for his fits of temperament, but there are moments when he give voles to utterances thst would do credit to s diplomat. There Is the case of Emanuel Fenerman. the 'cellist, who gave a concert at Zurich one night and regretted it for 13 years. Just be fore he went on a confrere whisper ed thst Toacantnl was in the house, and this Intelligence so disturbed the 'cellist that he gave a very shoddy performance. Indeed, hs was so chsgTlned that he rushed from the concert hall without going out front to meet the maestro. Recently they met in New York and Emanuel asked Toscanlnl "Do you remember thst terrible exhibi tion I gave In Zurich? I played badly that night." "No." replied Toscanlnt, "T have heard you on the air and admired you. but I never heard ym play In concert." Whereupon the 'cellist described the occasion snd insisted on refresh ing the maestro'a memory. Then Toscnnlni Interrupted "I still nay I have never heard you play in concert. I remember hearing a very had 'cellist In Zurich 13 years ag hut I never heard you plav." Jim Moran, the super-salesman who went to Alaska and sold refrlg eratore to the Eskimos, is In New York snd plans to remain here for a few dsys. But he didn't unfurl any new and startling Ideas to the boys at luncheon. At that, he doesn't need any new Ideas at the present, for his laurels gained In the north and In Holly wood are still green enough. Having disposed of those refrigerators. Mr. Mran then captured a herd of Arc tic flcaa and sold them In Hollywood clnlmlrw that fleas used to glactal light could work under Klelg lights better than domestic fleas. Hollywood paid him ft7&0 tor his polar fleas. That, honey-bunch, la salesmanship. New York varied its turkey din ner price greatly on Thanks!1 vlng Th better known restaurants rang ed btwn It snd S3 set. R-t there as one pi set on Third avenue thst Brady, M P. AND COLON HYOIRNB ing of flour, Is the richest natural focd source of vitamin B complex. Vitamin B oomplex means all of the entitles or factors that grow In foods containing vitamin B Including B-l or thiamin, B-3 or O or riboflavin, nicotinic acid (black tongue and pellagra curative), ant I neuritis, n tldermatltts and anti-gray hair fac tors, as well ss several others not as yet definitely recognized. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS When Bshy Takea To Drink Our baby, aged lfi months, has no um for water, except as a bath. In which he delights, since we - have given him orange Juice In large quantities. Is his distaste for water due to our practice of boiling all th water we offer him to drink? (MiM B. E. C.) Answer If the water Is suitable for adults to drink It Is suitable for the baby, sgreeably cold. It the baby needs more water than ha gets In fruit Juice and other liquids he will ask for It and drink It. Second Hand Smoke Can you glvo a statement that harm may come to non-smokers who have to breathe the air polluted by the exhalations of tobacco smokers? (S. M. D.) ' . Answer t believe infants and young children are frequently ser iously poisoned by breathing the air In a room polluted with tobacco smoke. Unquestionably non-smokers are affected more or less by breath ing air so polluted. In the same way. If not to the ssme degree, as they would be affected by smoking. Cure of Rupture the cure of hernia or rupture by In the cure of herna or rupture by in jection rather than operation. (Mrs. C. T. C.) Answer In most cases Injection treatment is aa likely to be suc cessful as operation. In any case It Is important to select only a phy sician of standing for the treatment. Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on hernia. If I know of a physician In your community who is skilled In the Injection technique I will be glad to give you his name. (Copyright 1938, John P. DUle Co) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to j communicate with Dr. Brady mould send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hilts. Calif. offered an eight course dinner for 1 40 cents, and this Included a glass of beer. Communications Llmlermnn In Denial To The Editor: In regard to your paper of Novem ber concerning the shooting at Trail postofflce, I am denying the state ments concerning me. I deny being a friend of Roy Thompson, I also deny doing considerable wine drinking with Roy Thompson Saturday night, or any other time. I also can prove any statement I have made In this note. Please print this as soon ss possible. Very truly yours, ROY LINDERMAN, Trail, Oregon. December 3, 1938. The Fascist Frankenstein To Ths Editor: Another crash! Or rather another attempt to crash your most Interest ing column, namely, thst headed "Communlestions.' Such a column, it ts claimed, are widely read. One can believe it. But why are they? Perhaps because the variety of opinions contained In them. Differ ences of opinion Is loved and feared. That makes them Interesting. They are always forerunners of social ad vance. Primitive societies don't hsve them. They are static, not dynamic because of that fact. A society thst clsmpe down on expressions of opin ion Is doomed. Is on Its wsy out. Such is the cam of present day Germany. Regarding the nsrl gan esters now In governmental high places there is sn opinion quite generally shsred that they are sctlng In the Interest of snd st the dictation of the upper- class the money power, Industrialists and the landed barons. This Is not the case. True. It was these who put them In power to crush the demsnds of labor for better stsndards of liv ing. And In this, the natl hsve suc ceeded beyond expectstlon. But they 1 did not dresm that the Frankenstein that was largely of their creation would turn on their creators. Now for the first time since the owner ship of property msde the owners boss, the bosses are now bossed! Herein is the lesson for England and France. Theae nations sre fall ing and fslling hard. Into ths trap of ths gangsters. They are giving, to Hitler and Mussolini to crush not only a free, but a helping hand to Hitler and Mussolini to crush Rus sia. But finding that Impossible, as j they surely will, logic of events will compel them to direct their energies to crush the so-called democracies. French lsbor hss awakened to the situation, hence the political strike. striking atzalnat marlanne beddtng with Hitler and Mussolini. This Is j the meaning of Munich. British labor as a whole hss not yet awaken ed to the fact. However, there are some stirrings In sections that en course? the opinion that it will awaken and It is hoped In time. The course of history hsngs on It. I R. HEON1. j Rt. I. Oold Hill. I Dec. 5, "38 4 PR. A. J. LOV FFI.TR Phvfinan and Sureon 30S Fluhrer Bids.. Medford Office hours: 10-U, 3-S. Tel. Of Ilea 60S Res. 1767. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS ISADOR Lubin commisslonsr of labor statistics In Washington, announces to the world that ths de pression to data has cost ths United States more than 177 billion dollars In national Income tt has failed to receive. Ws knew ft fellow once whose life was saddened by ths belief that he had lost a million dollars because he failed to make that much. SPEAKING of money, this dispatch comes from New York: ' "Encouraging business news failed to sld ths stock market today (Thursday). Prices slipped Irregularly lower on profit taking In a dull session. "Both bull snd bear forces WERE ENCOURAGED by the market action." When both bulls snd bears are en couraged when the market slips downward, It must bs true that ths country Is In an optimistic mood. AND this dispatch comes from Chicago: "Chairman James A. Farley, of the Democratic national com mittee, declining to take a hand In the selection of a Democratic candidate for mayor of Chicago next February expressed the con viction today that "the people of any city or state resent out side Interference In local affairs." Chairman Jim, you see, can put two and two together and get four as ths answer. MRS. Martin Kenny, winner of a 47500 prize In the famous (or perhaps Infamous) "stork derby," is on trial in Toronto (Canada) to de termine If she is mentally deficient. Psychiatrists testify that she "has a mental age of eight years and ten months, and should be confined In an institution." Mrs. Kenny, speaking of her legacy, says she has only $2500 of It left, ss she paid some bills and has bought a house for 11300. WELL, there are plenty of people In these days who think thst paying your bills snd buying a mod est home for cash Is a sign of mental Incompetence, but some way we can't avoid harboring the sneaking notion thst if there were more In competents of that sort this would be a better country to live In. DEFEATS IRISH, 30-23 Central Point high basketball team defeated St. Mary's of Medford last nigtot In the St. Mary's gym, 30 to 33. by virtue of converting most of their foul shots. The score was tied 8 -all at the end of the first quar ter and 17 to 17 at the half. Jensen of St. Mary'a paced all scorers with 10 points, while Myers of the winners tallied eight. Butte Falls high plays St. Mary's here next Friday night In the open ing southern division clash of the county class B conference. Enrollees Death Found Accidental MYRTLE POINT Ore., Oec. fl. (AP) A coroner's Jury decided todsy James Fugate, 31, CCC enrollee from Hazzard. Ky., who was crushed be tween a rock wall and a moving truck met desth accidentally. A companion, Woodrow Clay of Jack son, Ky.. said Fa i gate either Jumped or fell from the car Ssturday night when they were returning to the Sltkum camp from a dsnce. Face Struggle. VANCOUVER., B. C (AP) Can adian veterans who fought for loy alist Spain are drifting back to their homes, facing more serious prob lems than those who returned from the world war. Some sre wounded snd virtually all sre Jobless snd Csnsda provides no pension for ihem. Private subscriptions thus far hsve been enough to provide them with medical treatment and an allowance of M ft week each. Babies Can Cry SYDNEY. Australia. (AP)-A new movie theater here has ft room wall ed with thick glass Into which mothera can retire with their crying babies and still see the screen. Special equipment brings ths fltm dialogue Into the room. 1 Mid ret Guard. ANV ARBOR. Mich. ( AP John Brennan. Michigan football gusrd, la Just s little fellow at home. A 6 ft.-3 300-pounder, Brennan says he's the smallest man In his fam ily In three generations. He lives in Racine. Wis. Dobhln Sltll on Job. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Horses are still used for two per cent of sll rural msll delivery, say figures from the California State Automo bile association. This means about 700 carriers cling to the horse and buggy. 4 Meals Uatrh-Inc. CHICAGO. AP) Clifford Smith left his dog. Wheezer. in bis apart ment to gusrd the piece while he was gone. Wne n he returned he found that a burglar had tsken Wheeaer along with a $100 ring. 4 Fsther Makes (iood. LFX1NOTON. Ky. (Ap) Chsnce Plsy, sire of Phychle Bid, Grand Slam and Good Gamble, himself won the Jockey Club gold cup. Saratoga cup. Merchant and Cltl ins Handicap and Toboggan Hand i leap. Thi Capital Parade (Continued from Fage One ) tbe Job of "economics minister as well as bis own, for a considerable period. The meeting of a few days ago was by no means an Isolated phenome non. Roughly the same group of men has been called In by Morgenthau on several previous occasions notably in ths spring of 1937, when the ebullient Henderson warned of Im pending trouble from price fixing. and again In the fall of the ssme year, when Msrgenthau wanted the economists views on the crescent de pression. Moreover, Morgenthau re peatedly entertains outside experts of all kinds, from the highly con eervstlve Col. Leonard P. Ayres to men whose thinking Is pretty close to the new dealers'. He has meetings of business men, like Russell Lef- flngwell, the Morgan partners who approved the treasury gold policy. And. besides the economists, he often asks the new deal's high adminis trative officers to discuss their prob lems with him. Indeed, it's not too much to say that Morgenthau has transformed general consultation Into a special technique of government. The man who benefits, besides Morgenthau himself, is tbe president, to whom Morgenthau makes a careful report once a week. Besides the light It casts on Mor genthau's real position, the econo mists' talkfest la Interesting for still another reason. Last spring, the sd mlnlstratton was divided, openly and rather angrily, Into several hostile camps. Now there are Indications, among them the talkfest, that sev eral of the factions are drawing to gether. It's too much to expect the fiscal agencies to forget their In tramural quarrels, or Benjamin N. Cohen and Jesse H. Jones to come to an agreement on all points. But the growing sense that the period of controversial measures has passed Is drawing the president's lieutenants together. The process csn be seen at work in two directions. On one side, the monopoly inquiry spparently is to be conducted calmly, fairly and with facts for Its first object. Instead of the witch-hunt it might have been. And. on the other, men like Henry Morgenthsu are reconciling them selves to certain aspects of new deal policy which used to make them nervous. The process ts Important, because an end to the petty bicker ing among his advisers will greatly simplify the president's task. Model Airplane Found In Woods PORTLAND, Dec. 6. (AP) Harry Fosbury's elaborate model si rp lane, designed to fly in circles, got stub born and took a straight eourss dur ing a meet at Hlllsboro November 3. Rcsterdsy he got It back undam aged, but a little weather stained. A farm youth found It five miles from the take-off point. It had come to a perfect landing tn a woods clearing. The tiny gasoline' engine had kept it aloft until the gasoline was ex hausted. SEEK MISSING HUNTER IN TOLEDO TERRITORY TOLEDO. Ore., Dec. (AP) Ed ward Roberts. 55, who went hunting Saturday morning and failed to re turn, was the object of a sesrch to day by state, county and local police and coast guardsmen. Deputy Sheriff James Chambers ssld tracks believed those of the lost man were discovered t$ miles from the Toledo-Newport hlghwsy Isst night but dsrkness thwarted an ef fort to follow the trail. NOTED CORRESPONDENT TAKES LETHAL POTION WASHINGTON, te. (ff-Hnil T. Anderaon. 45. noted Washington conrapondent for St. Loula news papers, died today, as a result of what an associate said was an over doje of sleeping tablets. Anderson, a Pulitzer prlu winner, was regarded by fellow worKers as one of the most brllllsnt newspaper and magazine writers In the country. tndge Is Hero PORTLAND, Dee. rfP Circuit Judge Donald E. Lone prevented possible traffic ptle-up Monday when he leaped on the ninntng-board of a drlverlesa csr and brought It to a stop after steering It to the curb. The car apparently had been parked ahead of another on a steep street. When ttie other car pulled out It slowly begsn to roll down hlU. Irish Bomb Gym BBLPA9T. Dec. 8 (API The newly-erected Osellc Athletic associ ation hall near Dungannon. Tyrone, was wrecked by three bombs today. The bombing was believed to be in protest against the playlngs of Sun- j dy gsme by aawvlatlon teams snd the displaying of the trt-color of ' Eire (Southern Ireland). 7no Feels Flnrh PORTLAND. Dee. . Jw Portland s city roo. being reduced to meet bud get restrictions, gave away three buf falo and seven deer today. C. B Barton, Merrill cattleman, paid J0 for two bison cows and the city threw In the bull. REAL BARGAINS IN LUMBER while they last at BIG PINES LUMBER CO. PHONE 1. Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of tbe Mall Trlbone 10 and to years sgo. TEN YEARS AGO December i. 1928 (It ni Friday) Fire station boada to be put salt. The Rogue river pear crop amount ed to 4 554 cars and Is estimated at tS.000.000. It la tbe largest In tlx history of southern Oregon. Owen-Oregon mill to run on re duced basis during ths winter montha. Missing Talent men Is located In an Eagle Point district cabin. Emergency field near Ashland Is used by air mall planes because of fog over valley. Psg causes many minor auto collisions. TWENTY YEARS AGO December 6, IBIS (It was Saturday) Human fly to crawl up side ol Hotel Medford tomorrow. Liner carrying President Wilson to European peace confab passes through severe storm. Holland asked by Allies to Intern ex-kalser in the Dutch Bast Indies. Lyle Wslther. connected with the navy aviation corpa at San Diego is home to recuperate from an attack of flu. Report shows debt of city has been reduced during past year. PRINTERS RETAIN FIVE-DAY WEEK t INDIANAPOLIS. Dec. S (JPi Some 50.000 printers of the United Statei and Canada, organized In the Inter national Typographical Union (AFL), will continue to observe a hard-and-fast work week of five eight-hour days as a result of a referendum held November 23. They voted, 31.303 to 16.34S, against a proposal to loosen union laws to sllow a six-day or four-dsy week un der certain conditions. Woodruff Rsndolph, secretary -treasurer, an nounced at Its hesdqusrters here last night the vote on this other proposi tions put to referendum by the Sep tember International convention In Birmingham. A union law provides for a msxl mum eight-hour day and five-day week. Union members voted, 35,494 to 10, 556, to forbid renewal of piece or bonus pay scales now In effect and set up a scale based altogether on time after January 1, 1941. f COMPENSATION ILLS PORTLAND. Dee. Pi The state medical society filed recommenda tions with a legislative Interim com mittee today asking limitation of workmen's compensation to a definite list of occupational diseases. The society also recommended a board of medical referees, three phy sicians and surgeons expert In In dustrial diseases, be chosen from a list of seven submitted by the society and that the board's findings be final ajnd conclusive. TONY LAZZERj GIVEN RELEASE BY WRIGLEY CHICAGO. Dee. S 1P Thnv T.. zeri. the "mystery man" of the Chi cago Cubs, wired owner P. K. Wrlgley for his release tnrinv A i. ... granted Immediately. Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted I'm glad I'm out of the dog house at lust That's where I've been for six weeks past! I sold my wife's classy '38 Chevrolet coupe, Due to customer demand, couldn't replace till today. Now she has a new black beauty thirty-nine, Don't imagine she'll be home much of the time. She's just like most of the ladies now-a-days, They ALL are mighty proud of their new Chevrolet! I Chevy M. Hurd Rope River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Dept. SI North Riverside I'sed Car Ut Riverside at 41b 6TH AND flR