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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1939)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1939. MedfordSWTribune "EirTon Id SfiDlhern Orrgnm BmcIi th Uull Trihunr." (tally Eiep ftetnrdiir. MEDfOHI) HHINTINO CO l-tT-t No Ftr 8L phoo II ROBERT W RUHU E11ior. EKNLUT R QILSTHAf Unifr. nt-rnd amcont cM fnttr t Hert ford. Oregon, unrttt Act of March I. !" SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br SUli In Adranc: Dally and Sunday on yaar . ..06 Dally and Sumlay ill month... . 110 Daliy and Suudi y t hr monihi 100 Dally and Sufday ona monih . 71 Bv Pari-tei- In Arfvanc Madfnrd. Ari- lind. Cantral Paint. Jackanvtlle. Ootd HUL R"iu Hivar. phoanli, Talai nil m motor rouTaa; Dally and SufifUy on yaar 00 Dalit and Sunday ctia monlb .. It All tirmi cash In adranca. Offirlnl Piipcr of Hi Oly ot HMlfnrd Off. rial Pdim of Jarkwio Vftaaty HKMI1RK OF THP. ASSIMIA TK. PHKHH BriolTlliM Full ..Wi-jrO Ml" nvrwtrr. Tha AMoclatad Vrw la aifluilvaly Btl'ia-I to tha uaa for publication of all Bwa diapntrheg cradi'ad to It or othar wlaa erad'ted to thi pipar and alio ta the local nw pubilnha-l hraln AH rlita Tor publication nt ipaelal dlpatchi hareln ia alio raaarvad. Utlll PKH8 OF UNITED PRESS UEMBKR OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCIILATIUNS A J vri Itins rtapr.-ntatlTaa WEST-MOM. IDA V COMPANY. IMC. Otfteaa In Now YoTlt. Chicago. Datrolt. Bun Franrlico. Loa Annalaa, Baal t la, Portland. BL Loul Atlanta. Vancouar. 0RfG0f fUBLI SHE Ye Smudge Pot Bf Arthur Perry. A Pacific Coast alien labor peace disturber has been ordered to pay a $125 fine imposed for contempt of court. The offense consisted of describing the lower court's decision in a labor case ... J - tUa a5 UUUHK-UUS. iUO vi ..... J 1 1 . rtontl line iinpuscu UJUii m, s., seems to come under the same description. "The bride's mother wore a dress of dusty rose lace with a velvet Jackpot of dubonet color." (Pine Ridge (Calif.) Advocate) The deuce to payl An Investigation Into flogging of convicts in San Quentin prison is sought, as a result of hunger strikes behind the walls. None of the affidavits filed to date tend to show the felons were treated as bad, as they did their victims. BRIDAL BOMBS A charivari at Millcrsburg, ac cording to the Albany Democrat- Herald, was "reported a huge uccess, with plenty of dynamite and other noisemakers, followed by a treat of the bride and groom." This is one of the few times high explosives have been used in the social pestering of newlyweds, and, while chic seems a bit tempestuous. If the merrymakers ever get to tossing cans of nitroglycerine around In a carefree manner, romances will be blasted faster than they can be consummated, and a peril ous business, to boot. The time mny come when a wedding will be recorded on the society pages, towlt: The groom, who had a leg blown off in his first marriage, after the knot had been tied, quickly whisked his scared and blushing bride to a traveling fortress love-nest, and then re treated behind his private Magi not line, the gift of his maternal Grandmaw. After a few hand grenades had been thrown at the wedding party by social hoodlums, the groom appeared in his shirt-sleeves and passed the cigars for the boys and candy for the girls. The well-wishers then departed without the ne cessity of calling the coroner. A perusal of the sporting pages of numerous upstate news papers reveals several high school football squads have everything the matter with them but termites. "The city first aid car was foiled to 1327 Marlon street at 7 o'clock this morning where, ac cording to the report of Capt. Charles Charlton, a young wo man had fallen while taking a bath and cut her phalanx at the first Joint (right).' (Salem Capital-Journal) What's right about it? Punchboard fruit cakes have shown up. and ore the first signs of the approaching holiday sea son. Like the bride's biscuits, they are hard to beat. TELL THE POLICE (Lov Agony Col.) "For some time I have been feeling poorly, a very unusual condition for me. Finally the doctor diagnosed my trouble as a slow form of arsenical poisoning and I find that my husband has been giving arse nic to mo. I discovered arsenic hidden in his coat. I am des perate. What shall I do? Dee." "DRAW -SAW TECHNIQUE TAUGHT" (Del Norte Tripli cate hdlinri The worker must not drag himself to it any faster than he drags himself awav from it. C'ioswi llm, f1! loo uit to Cies fcfy Ads li l:io p m. rWM )g) AsVpiTi OR Editorial Correspondence Fredericksburg, V., Oct. 13. Yes and iff Friday the 13th! But our luck hasn't been so bad thus far. When we came through here last February on the R. F. and C. en route to Miami, the place looked so interesting from the car window we vowed we would stop the next time out. So with the zero hour for Washington, D. C, approaching we forced our way Into a Greyhound bus this morning and came hither. And Fredericksburg IS one of the most Interesting places we have ever seen. Moreover the day has been gorgeous, the first touch of Fall since we arrived in the East, the air crystal clear, the sun bright but not too warm, and we have Just returned from a two hour motor trip over the battlefields of the surrounding terrain. Battlefields, like dramatized novels, however, are Invariably disappointing. It was true with our visit to the battlefield of Waterloo many years ago, also when we took in Gettysburg, in 1934. And for the same reason. The actual scene, and the sensa tion created, are far below the long cherished products of the imagination. Yet we never fail to look them over when opportunity offers and no doubt will continue to do so. Rather like some people regarding side-shows. They can't resist them though they have never seen a good one. They always think they are going to THE NEXT TIME. We don't know Just what we expected. But we do know we felt let down. Perhaps because our earliest recollections historically, were concerned with a book entitled the "Boys of '61", and some highly exciting Civil War stories by E. G. Trowbridge, where the hero was a Union spy in one volume and a Union drummer boy in another. Therefore when we set out to look over the battlefields of the Wilderness, Chancellorsville and Spotsylvania Court House, we were prepared for the thrills of youth again. Well, anyway, it was a nice trip and as before stated a perfect day, even though the expected thrills never came. No, we couldn't see the boys in blue, or the boys in grey In their hand-to-hand sanguinary struggles in the Wilderness, perhaps because it WAS a wilderness, and a peculiarly colorless and uninspiring one, scrub oak and pine, flat as a pancake, and for miles and miles not a sign of a living thing, an animal or a human habitation! There were a few signs, however, to show this was where General, Grant started the march that didn't end until the surrender of the Con federate force, and told the apprehensive Abraham Lincoln that he was going to fight it out on that line, if it took him all summer. Chancellorsville and Spotsylvania were more interesting, high rolling country, set off as part of the National Park system, and dotted liberally with accurate and interesting historical de scriptions of Just what happened at this point and that. As some of the original trenches, also the gun and rifle pits, are still In evidence, while many others have been restored, one could better visualize the struggle. But even so somehow Trow bridge's drummer boy refused to come back to life again, which was very disappointing. Our guide and chauffeur didn't help any, when he took a cigarette out of his mouth long enough to point to a rock and observe that was where Stonewall Jackson was shot, and then at a shaft of granite about a hundred yards from it, as where "he fell." Curious, we got out of the car to examine the rock but could find no mark on it of any sort, the monument did recount the shooting of the great Confederate leader by his own men. Just to test out the moronic capabilities of the alleged guide further we asked him if Stonewall Jackson was on FOOT or horseback when he was killed. The young man answered he didn't know. Up to that time he had known all the answers regardless of what the history or the guidebooks might have said, about It. Fredericksburg was far more Interesting than the battlefields, because here one could visualize the past, it wasn't merely a bit of countryside like any other countryside. The Princess Anne hotel for example where we had lunch, dates back to 1785, when it was known as the Barton House, the home of Washington's ambassador to Great Britain. In entering through the old colonial portico (restored) one if Impressed by the list of distinguished guests, emblazoned above, Daniel Webster, Charles Dickens, General Robert E. Lee, Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, a list that might come under the heading of anti-climax in the New Yorker! And after luncheon we could fairly see the ragged Continentals under Washington, eating a boiled leather boot for their noonday meal. A more terrible and uneatable mess of "wittles" we haven't encountered in many a moon. but when it s as cold as a bloodhound s nose good night! Only a few blocks away, we ran Into James Monroe's law office which was built In 1786, and remains today precisely as it was at that time, with the exception of the furnishings which have been collected by his descendants, and to view which the charge Is one-quarter of a dollar. It was this collection which induced Mrs. Herbert Hoover to "restore" a James Monroe room in the White House modern artificers being so skillful they can restore practically any colonial antique, so all but experts are deceived by it. We would have liked to have talked with some old resident of Fredericksburg before departing, but have to get back to Wash ington for a dinner date, so must catch the 4:45 bus. Again we will have to force our way In, no doubt, if "Greyhound" doesn't pay a dividend regularly then there's a nigger in the woodpile somewhere. From coast to coast It is the same story, busses on well travelled routes art always crowded. Here In Washington they run In three and four sections, day In day out! We wonder how It would feel to go down to one's office every morning, In an atmosphere like this, past the house where George Washington's mother, Mary, lived, beneath the famous horse chesnut tree the first President of the United States himself planted, and on to the home of John Paul Jones, and for good measure, that noon perhaps, stroll a few blocks down to the Rappahannock river, about the size of the Willamette neat Salem, but an olive-yellow color, where In 1862 the Union forces under Bumslde, were decimated by the armies of Lee and Jackson, when they tried to cross. It must do SOMETHING to a person we should think, nut perhaps those who live here never give a thought to it. anymore than we do at home when a covey of quail, sweeps across the road, barely missing the radiator cap! R. W. R. niiin E' ENDED FOR YEAR Rig Applegnte. Oct. 18. (Spl.) A nipping frost a short time ago ended the cucumber harvest for this year at the E. H. Taylor farm near Ktich. Hut this does not menu that the work is over. The crop has rated 4(10 barrels, IIR.') of which are dills, ready for use. Those not made into dills will be kept in salt stock for six months In preparation for the sweet pickle market next year At the prcsi-nt time Mr Taylor if turning the last year s Fried food is bad enough at best, salt stock Into sweets. Next year he expects to use cement tanks instead of barrels for the pickling process At the present he also Is hnr vesting his four-acre onion crop! with an estimated yield of 100. 000 pounds. He expects to store the crop at Medford until the onion price rises. Eaql Point Card Party. Eagle Point. Oct. 18. (Spl. Eagle Point P.-T.A. will give a card party Friday at 8 p. in. in the high school. Ptnochlr. 500, and bridge will be plaved A small admission charge will in-, elude refreshments. All are cor dially Invited. Proceeds will In used to buy piny equipment for the lower grades. - - I'm UiU mauue al a.1 Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining, lo pernios! nealtn and nyflene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be snsered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self add retted envelope Is enclosed- Letters should b brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters rerelred only a few can be answered No reply ran ba made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. ., Ill lam Brady, 265 El Canilno. Beverly Hills, Calif. NOTES ON Two terrors of childhood that never happen, as nearly as I can learn, are "cramps" from going in swim ming when too warm or some thing and "cholera mor b u s" t r e mendous belly ache and vom iting and diar rhea from eating green apples. These bogies belong In the same category as tne village bar bershop myth thaf if you place a hair from an horse s tail, or even a human hair, in a bottle of water, in due time it will turn into a snake. Probably most boys and girls today smile at these childish beliefs of most grownup people fifty years ago. Today the first thing parents think of when a boy or girl has a belly ache is appendicitis. Since people generally have become aware of the fact that the appendix is situated in the southwest portion of the abdo men a good deal of misunder standing, confusion and unnec essary alarm is occasioned by misinterpretation of the signifi cance of belly ache. Altho the appendix is in the right lower corner of the abdo men It does not follow that pain or distress due to inflammation in the appendix is felt in that same southwest section. On the contrary, the pain or discomfort (often it is not so much pain or ache as it is a sense of great tension or compression) usually occurring with the on set of appendicitis Is felt In the "pit of the stomach," that is, in the middle of the belly (front wall of abdomen) well up In the north temperate zone. Only after the appendicitis, if that is what the belly ache means, has pro gressed considerably does the lower right quadrant become tender or painful. This is a lit tle lesson in safety first for every one remember that the belly ache of appendicitis does not begin in the southwest but rather in the northmidsection. If the ache, pain, soreness or dis tress Is felt on one side It Is un likely to signify trouble In the appendix. Another little lesson In safety first which every one ought to learn is this: The Capital Parade By Joseph Alsop and Robert Kintner Released by The North American Newspaper Alliance, Ino. Washington, Oct. 18. People watching the senate dealing with the neutrality act are beginning to ask, "When is a filibuster a filibuster, and when is it not?" The inquiry has all the dreadful possibllties of the medieval scholars' argument about how many angels could stand on the head of a pin. The facts of the situation are pretty plain, however. Al though violently disclaiming the intention of filibustering, the senators opposed to repeal of the arms embargo are exhibit ing a propensity for oratory which is unusual, even for sen ators. Just about everything there Is to say has been said already, yet virtually every member of the opposition is giv ing the public the benefit of his views, and frequently at the greatest possible length. Certain senators are expected to speak more than once, and two or three are said to have several speeches on this chests. By now, the repealist leadership has abandoned its hopes of quick action, and hardly dares antici pate a vote before the end of next week. Filibuster or no filibuster, there is certainly a great deal of talking. The object can hard ly be to convince the senate, because, in the first place, sen ate votes are rarely changed by debate, and. in the second, no one Is listening anyway. Day after day, the senate chamber grows emptier and emptier. Meanwhile the opposition leaders privately admit to hoping that, if senate action is sufficiently deferred, opinion in the house will change enough to endanger embargo repeal there. No doubt Brady, M D. BELLY iVCHE In any case of belly ache If there is any suspicion or fear of appendicitis it is dangerous to take a laxative or cathartic. Should the trouble actually be appendicitis, the effect of laxa tive or cathartic is to aggravate and perhaps increase or hasten spreading of the inflammation. In the statistics accumulated by careful study of this question over many years we have con vincing proof that the wisest management of acute belly ache is quiet, rest, no medication un less or until medical attention is procured, and especially NO PHYSIC, and of course no ene ma or injection in lieu of physic, for the effects, increase in peris talsis or intestinal activity or movement, are the same spreading of inflammation, great er chance of peritonitis (general inflammation of bowels) which is the fatal outcome of append! citis untreated or improperly treated. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Neuromuscular Irritability. I know you have pointed out re peatedly that "nervousness" la no explanation for symptoms, but still I can't understand why I am so very sensitive. Jumpy and Irritable? M. L. R. Answer Perhaps nutritional defic iency. Include in your diet plenty of milk, cheese, peas, beans, pea nuts, raw cabbage- and salad greens. Three pints of milk dally or Its equiv alent In cream, etc. Send twenty five cents coin and stamped envel ope bearing your address. Ask for booklet "Nerves and Nutrition." Varlroxtle. For twenty year I have had en larged veins, and for about a year an ulcer on my log. The ulcer gets Just about healed up and then be comea raw and open again. H. a. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on Varicose Veins and Varicose Ulcer. Space limitation pre vents answer here. Recipe for Dandruff. I have tried to get the sulphur, salllcyllc acid pomade you suggested for dandruff, but no store here seems to know what It la. C. C. R. Any druggist can prepare It for you precipitated sulphur one dram, salicylic acid 20 grains, cold cream one ounce. Rub a wee bit Into scalp by parting hair, covering one-fourth of scalp each evening In the week. Shampoo the seventh evening. Con tinue two or three weeks to control dandruff. (Protected by John T. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send tetter direct to Or. William Brady, M n.. 2(i5 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. the senatorial character is one : reason for the endless talk. An , other is this private hope of an upset in the house. In the house, the outcome Is un questionably less certain than In the senate. So far as can b. discovered, not a single senate vote has shifted, one way or another, and It la atlll a pretty good bet there will be 65 vntes for repeal of the embargo Sixty-five votea mean a two to one majority for repeal. So far. no re sponsible person has been discovered who Is willing to predict an actual house defeat, but aome wise guessers put the repealist margin at only 10 votes, and the average predictions run between 30 votes and 40. The house Is a large body, and these are not majorities to Inspire great con fidence. Furthermore the anti-repeal lead er are probably right In believing that time la on their stde. The re peallsts are gaining nothing by delay, and It Is a maxim of legislative, as of other kinds of warfare, that, when you are not going forward, you are actually losing ground. The house la susceptible to panic. The Coughllnlte and other anti-repeal mall haa given members an excuse to become pan icky. A they sit In their offices wondering about the next election and worrying about the letter-writers, men who would normally favor repeal Incline to change heir minds. Nevertheless, the confidence of the repealist strategists still seems to be well-founded. Their problem, so far as the house la ronrerned. Is to obtain a reversal of last session's vote on the Vorys amendment. This amendment, which embodied a pro posal similar to Herbert Hoover s ban on offensive weapons only, was em bodied In the Bloom bill by a vote of JU to 173. with about 40 members absent or paired. Repealist strategists expeot to t a majority of the votea of the men who were not recorded on the Vorys amendment. Supposing, however, that these votes are evenly spilt, they still need only 32 additions! votes to win. The number la small, and reports continue to come In of changes In different state delegations. A Repub lican has plumped for repeal in Ohio, and four Republl.dns and a Demo crat have done the same In Iowa. Converts are being made among the Pacific coast representatives, and In New Jersey and New York. Even In Kansas, where the Kansas City Star's poll shows a remarkable repealist sentiment, a couple of votes may be picked up. Hoover's and lliidberch's Indorse, ment of something like the Vorys amendment is a decided dlssdvan- I tage, but there are also new ad- vantages on the repeal side. The j 90-day-credH controversy, a teapot I Tempest, but a thre,itenlns one. has been hsjitlly settled In the aer.d'.e i Tie problem or Wo treat restriction , on shipping u alio being wisely dull with. When th senate get through, repeal of th embargo will probably be the only point at luue. If the senate majority for repeal la any where near what la expected. It too will have Its effect In the bouae. Altogether, the tight ha not yet departed from the foreseen pattern With propagandist group atlll hard at work, the unforeseen ma" bob up at any moment. Yet It la far more likely that a German decision to unleash the war is the air In all It violence and wastefulness wtU clinch the victory for the repeallat aide. Communications For World Federation. To the Editor: If murder Is a crime, does it help any to kill by wholesale? Our laws holds the instigator and the spectator that does noth ing to interfere equally guilty with the perpetrator. That doesn't leave much room for the neutral. He is about as valu able as a jellyfish. A man that does not know the right when he sees it, and will ing to stand for it, is not worthy to be called a man. When I hear some of the de bates in Washington by our sup posed representatives, I have to wonder if we really are an in telligent people. Those now rant ing on isolation, neutrality and pacifism, and their like, are the real cause for the war-mad con dition of the world today, and they are trying to repeat. Do you know if our govern ment had joined the League of Nations and helped to turn it into a World Federation similar to the United States in prin ciple, it would have put an end to war forever' Talk about isolation, pacifism, neutrality, or war regulations Is all nonsense. You might as well pass a law to stop murderers from shooting below the belt. War will never stop as long as nations are allowed to carry arms. There must be only one armed power .and their sole duty to keep the peace, and en force the decrees of the world supreme court. Are not Hitler, Stalin and other dictators in the same class as Al Capone, Dutch Schultz, Tom Pendergast and John Dill inger? And should be treated In the same manner? There are enough right-thinking people to rule this world according to a majority rule, and as it should be, if united and given the proper leadership. Free them from this dreadful scourge of dictators and even the Germans are human and would readily respond to the golden rule. Can you not help to unite the world with one thought: Banish war forever? Yours truly, s Ira C. Jones. The Butt Fall. To the Editor: "Back to the oxcart to RnHo Falls." The above is the tilio most nearly annlies to the ent route to Butte Falls. Fish lake and Lake of the Woods. Ponular mmnniun tnr ' I 'P...-' have been forgotten In the con struction of the road. Besides the narrow. ernnlceH anH m,,.h places just above Reese creek, there are at least two places where a medium in boulders has been dumped onto me roaci in anticipation of win ter rains. These boulders left for the unwary motorist to roll Into the bed of th save the county the cost of employing a steam roller. Two small red flags, noth gently wave the sportsman! traoesman or ordinary motorist to slow down, but unless he has been over the road, he Is totally unprepared to creep alone at two in riv. miiB. hour and pray that he meets no one until ne is over the worst of the road ahead. Good monev was mni . set power poles and to widen the road In nlaro. k,,i s. as the surface of the road is concerned, we might as well look for a train nf ov..,. - get to Medford and the other aiiey towns to do our shop ping or pleasure seekinu this winter. The road u a Jackson eonntv pAnia ...i have driven from distant parts oi me united states have com mented on the Butte Falls t,a as the worst in thousands of nines of travel. At present it is a menace to safety, and unless steps to sur face the road are taken imme diately, before the winter rains and snow come, someone's life will be the price of this negli gence and disgrace. Very sincerely yours, Naomi Frcdenburg. pope mncernYd by shadow over europe Castel Gandolfo. Oct. 18. (APV Pope Pius declared todav "the enemies of God" were cast ing their "sinister shadow" over Europe in a more threatening way every day. The pope expressed his con cern in a public address to the new Lithuanian minister to the Holy See, Stanislaus Girdvain is. whose country recently came under the influence of Soviet Russia. JLay By Frank Jenkins. AT THE moment, the phase of the war that- is most im portant is the German attack on British shipping both naval and merchant. Its purpose is to wear down British supremacy on the sea to the point where the blockade may be broken. IT WAS British supremacy at sea that defeated Germany in the first World war. It was British supremacy at sea that ultimately strangled Napoleon. It has been sea strength that has kept Britain supreme for centuries. Whether it can be broken with the new weapons now available remains to be seen. There can be no doubt, however, of the importance of the present German effort. llfHAT is really happening re " mains obscure. The Ger mans are boasting loudly for two obvious reasons to build up morale at home and to TEAR DOWN morale in England and France. The British are almost pain fully reticent. Whether their secretiveness Is good strategy can not yet be determined. There is always the chance that too much secrecy may lead the British people to jump to the conclusion that the Germans are doing more damage than is ac tually the case. What people will believe when they know that full information is being withheld from them is always a curious study. ANOTHER-mercy murder" is reported from New York, where a father killed his step son because he feared the child would go insane, like his mother. The trouble with these "mer cy" killings is this: Who is to make the decision? This writer, for example, thinks he knows quite a few persons who might be better off dead, but would hesitate about having SOME ONE ELSE'S judgment along the same line applied to him. IJERE'S a war angle that is good: (It has been reported vaguely in the press several times, but has been little com mented on.) The German government (Hit ler) is REPATRIATING (which means bringing back home) Ger mans living in Russia and in the small Baltic states over which Russia has been extending her influence. Why? Well, Stalin has probably been watching the Hitler technique in seizing countries with German minorities and has said to Hitler: "Get 'em out! You can't use that scheme on me." At The National Capitol with Job W. Kelly CodhijuN3 from Pae One.) products as raised In the Pacific Northwest. Any concessions on these products to Latin America as a "good neighbor" gesture is a blow at the growers of the Oregon-Washington area. Not too much confidence is placed in the department of state in the cur rent penetration of South Amer ica, because the administration sold the lumber industry down the river when cementing good will with Canada. First of the trade agreements to come ud since the war ar now being negotiated with Ar gentina and Chili. Pacific North west products nlared i are livestock, wool, turkeys, cheese, casein, pears, apples, prunes, plums, apricots, grapes, melons animal and farm pro ducts lumber, kraft board and dried fruits. OOHEDULED to appear to defend J the Interests of the northwest are: Rufs c. Holman. senstor for Orryon; Representative Wsrren O. Magnuson. Washtnston; Repreaenta- a 1 u ot' 1 .IW . ,ia .,' 1h..,'".o ';e. MIIIIIIIIIIIJP vmiiiiin 1 ii Ml I tire James W. Mott and Walter M. Pierce, Oregon: Representative Compton I. Whit and Henry C. Dworshak. Idaho; R. A. Ward, of Portland, for the Pacific Wool Grow ers; Raymond Reter. Medford. for the Oregon - Washln;ton - California Pear bureau; National Lumber Manufac turers association, by Wilson Comp ton: Prank Brenckman. for the Na tional Grange, to protest agricul tural and animal products. The list gives an Idea of the Impor tance In which the Latin American program la viewed. THERE was ' some hope by th lumber Industry that the South American business enjoyed by British Columbia would be diverted to Wash ington and Oregon on the assumption that because of the war British ahlpa would withdraw from the trade. How ever, at the suggestion of the state department, a 300-mlle aafety zone has been approved, by the Panama conference, around South America and within this line ships of th belligerent can operate without fear of attack. By this agreement, British Columbia lumber can still be ex ported to South America, providing, of course, the safety belt la recog nized by belligerents. APPREHENSION" expressed here by representatives of the animal and farm products that the best th producers of Oregon and Washington will get will be the worst, when the agreements are adopted. Should th treaties, when made public, disclose that agriculture la receiving the ahert end. opposition will he formed to resist the administration's coming proposal that the Export - Import bank be authorized to extend credit amounting to several hundred mil lion dollars to the Latins. Objections may also come from the army of Americans who have invested their savings in South Amer ican bonds on which Interest ha ceased and the principal defaulted. Owners of these worthless securities are numbered by the thouaanda In the northwest. 4 Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from th files of th .Mall Tribune 10 and 20 year a so. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 18, 1929. (It was Friday.) Crater lake travel continued by good weather, with 5,000 peo ple entering the park- so far this month. Tariff hearing by senate In vestigates charges lobby employ ed to aid manufacturers. High school students hurrying to lunch, fined in justice court for speeding. Work to be rushed on streets and sewers before winter sets in. Sale of tickets for Frosh-Rook game here starts with big de mand. Russian plane circles city, en route from Moscow to New York City. Wild selling on Wall street sends stocks to new lows. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 18, 1919. (It was Saturday.) Lieut. Maynard is winner of army plane race across the con- tinent, in daylight flights. Frank Ray raises a cabbage measuring 13 inches around, in his garden near Tolo. Local Jeweler reports to sold $5,000 worth of diamonds to valley residents last week. Armistice Day, November II, to be a holiday in Jackson county. Sugar hoards In nation to be released under new food act. Soldiers sent to Brooklyn to end longshoremen's strike, by war department. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE- Wilkwl fjlome! And TmH Jump 0g tf Bed hi lie Mornmj Rum' g G, ii T!lf JJiT ,houl11 Pour et two jmuaiii of it not flowing froel,. jour food doesn't disesL It just decays In the bowel,. G bloats up our .ton,.,,, i ,et cmM w whole system I. poisoned and rou feel sour, sunk nd th. world look. punk. A mere bowel movement doesn't get al the ,. It takes those good, old C."e" bile So. "i " Pounds o! iid ?,T- U 'r7'' nd m"ke f"l "up end I up. H.rmles. gentle, yet amaiin to rnakiag bile tow freely. A.k for ran,,-. ill. I, ZTAfi'h Vt """ R'f"" ""him Use. At all drug stores, lot sad tit. rl mnMiJicJsvl at JO'MtSttr I ipT QAKLAND I SSL-V Tali - , A Hosse flwsyFsowHOMt Completely Renovated - and Redecorated RATES With detached bath from! 50 daily With Bath from ZQ0daily G4IMGE IN fWM0C(d 0N W T ION W Hi 5hQ Ccmei&tiBvwfo STAY AT THE SAN PABLO Very Convenient to Bus and Rail Transportation to Treasure Island Town