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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1939)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1939, MEDFORDvlWTRIBUNE "Etryon Ip Soatharn Oreo Umdm lh UkII rrihaiw." Dllj Ecpt Saturday. Publiantti by UtSUPURD PRINTINO CO Sl.lT-3 No Fir SL Pbon Tl ROBERT W RUHU Bdltor. ERNEST R OIL.STRAF Unair. Bntrd u MCond-ciM mmr t MI ford. Oron. unrttr Act of March I. 1171 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MtH In Artnct Dally aod 8undr on yaar . ...ISM Dally and Sunlaj- ail mootha... 110 Dally and Huuay lhr moniha 100 Dally and Sunday ona month.. 7 By Parrlar Id A1anca Madfnrd. Air land. Caniral Pilot. Jackannvllla. Qld Hill. Rrtua Rlw. Phoanlx. Talant and on motor routaa: Dally and Sunday ona yaar Si-00 Dally and Sunday na month. All Mrmi caih In advanca. Orrirlnl Pmiw of in City I MmUm Offlrlnl Pap of JarkMin Coonly UKMIIKK OF rilR AMIM!IATBU VHtLH RtrfWIns Full l.aard IVIra rtarrlra. Tha Aaaoclaiad Praaa la iciuiirl ntltlad to tha uaa Tor publication of a" o.w. rt..pich cradliad to H or othor wIm fMd'iad to thia papar and alao U tha local ntwn published haraln. All rlfhta for publication of paclai dl. pitch-, haraln ara alao wrwA. MiCMBFCRS OF IINITBD PRBBS UUfRER OF AUDIT BtlRBAO OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Rapraaentattvaa WEST-IIOLLIDAV COMPANY. INC Offices Id New ToV Chlcafo. Detroit. San Francisco. Los Angelee, Saatua. Portland. St Loula Atlanla. Vancouver PUBLisiitVj' sY?iatim Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry, An assistant professor of home economics at the university ot California, after scienlinc re. search, reports the height of the kitchen-sink makes housewives cranky. The height 01 me kitchen sink also wrecks the dis position of the daughter of the house, when she beholds it full of dishes, and no way to get out of washing them. A brief review of the life of Alphonse Capone, ex-gangster czar, due for early liberation from a federal prison, shows that outside of a few murders,' and committing most of the major felonies, was not a bad sort of fellow. Many of the Older Girls have started mincing matters for the Thanksgiving mince-meat. PHI, PHI. PHI GIRLS (Eugene Regiiiar-Guard) 'One big "ahame. on you" to some of the feminine rootere years beyond student age who were such aporta as to tear from their coats the big yellow mums and trample them beneath their feet at the flnlat of the game." ... Throughout the state amateur theatricals are raging in many rural areas, so much country correcpondence lists the names of the country thespians assigned to roles, rne legislative com mittee of the State Grunge should do something about liis, and sponsor a law to compel the printing of the names in an ad Joining column of all neighbors who are plowing. A "polite No!" was.IIcrr Hit ler of Germany's reply to the mediation offers of Belgium and Holland. Even Belgium and Hol land did not expect Der Runtz fuehrer to snarl a discourteous Yes. If ever lured into the par lor for a peace parley, the chances are better than even he'd break the leg off the best chair. There is some talk about merging Ham & Eggs, and all other Utopian pension plans Into a drive to end all pension drives, and bring laziness for all. THE SOFT ANSWER (Astoria Astorlan-Budgat) "While there Is considerable achool of thought In this country at this time that leans to the Idea that what happens to the people of other countries Is no concern of ours, this brother-ln-Isw, la all for going out and do ing what he can in foreign fields. While we might think, that there Is some little religious work he could find to do in this country, he doesn't see It thst way. And no doubt hs Is right." (Harold Haynea Writings). The high school football mud dle over the mythical state title, according to rumor, will be fur ther muddled after the Inst Tur key Day, by the discovery one team sported a tackle who voted for Roosevelt three years ago. MILITARY EXPERTS "The same is true of some military experts who hopped out of the cabbage patch following Hitler's invasion of Poland. Not many of them have a working knowledge of strategy and tac tics and wouldn't know a tor pedo warhead from a cross bow. But they, too, have been given the grand build-up in the Holly wood manner and are in great demand by the public even though they would be hard pressed to understand the Boy Scout Manual. Yet they write and talk, talk and write. They are as prolific as rabbits. But they are as superficial as a bar bershop gun tan." (Ncwsdom.) Kindly Read "All" of This! THE Mail Tribune rejoices at the everlasting walloping that the State College at Corvallis gave the State University at Eugene in football recently. This is as it should be. The college maintains universal military training for boys. It specializes in the stratos pheres of manual training which enrich mankind. Corvallis is the place where you should expect to find students who coordinate between eye and hand young men who are husky and skillful, youths who are practical. There go boys who are highly Intelligent in their various trades, callings and such avocations as cluster around high mechanical ability. The University is, on the other hand, primarily t school of lib eral arts around which are gathered the professions of music, law, medicine, pharmacy, engineering in its theoretical branches, Jour nalism, literature and the other fine arts. That such a school ot modern magii should even compete in a football game against one of the best agricultural and mechanical colleges in the United States Is preposterous. THE University deserved a licking and got it. What business has a lawyer, a doctor, a fiddler, or a sandwich cutter going up against another youngster from a school whose business is to train his muscles and channel his mind into the stark problems of a hard, practical life? Of course, the University got walloped. We hope it will always get walloped until the academicians of Eugene learn that the football championship should naturally belong to the State College at Corvallis, which trains farmers, artisans, cow doctors, highway engineers, super-electricians, major-generals and tree experts. YOU cannot go against nature. And no school that teaches its pupils much about the higher and better things of life, no school devoted largely to noble ideals and the higher branches of sublimated fiddlesticks should tangle up with harsh, callous- handed, bull-voiced he men with Neolithic Jaws and who carry pile drivers in their pants. The stuffing which was pounded out of U. of O. should teach the Webfoots the truth: Don't monkey with the buzz saw. This noble truth should hereafter be placed well up toward the begin ning of their curricular requirements. In the meantime for the poetic justice of O. S. C.'s glorious vic tory, The Tribune thanks all the Oregon gods! (End quote!) NOW, before all the wild-eyed grads of U. of O. storm this sanctum, break the quarter-sawed oak table over ye editor's bald pate and smash the presses, let it be stated the above was NOT WRITTEN IN THIS OFFICE, but was written In Emporia, Kansas, for a paper called the Gazette by a pretty well-known editor, named William Allen White! So if there are any complaints they can be addressed to the greatest sountry editor in the United States. Address, Emporia, Kansas! The only alterations made in this office were to change "State College at Manhattan" to "State College at Corvallis," and "Uni versity at Lawrence", to "University at Eugene." Otherwise the editorial is precisely as Mr. White wrote it. Like Oregon, Kansas has an annual football contest between the state university and the state college, and also like Oregon, this year's battle was won by the College, although Judging by the above, it wasn't as close or as exciting a contest, and also Judging by the above, certain editors in Kansas can commit murder and get away with it. INCIDENTALLY this department doesn't agree with the thesis ot Mr. White's offering in the slightest, In fact, it's the sheerest balderdash but feeling in a slightly facetious mood we thought it would be amusing to reprint the Gazette's blast at its university footballers and then when the pressure reached the bursting point, pull an "April Fool" at the finish. Now we shall see whether or not that "thought" was correct, or even as a joke you can't do In Oregon what you can do In Kansas. Vote er Straight Hokum N EEDLESS to say this column Borah when he says: "The Independent vot la the real salvation of politics in this country." He is. Yet, strange to say, how few political leaders agree with that truism! And how prone they are when another presidential elec tion comes around, to revive that moth-eaten old wheeze, "vote the party ticket straight!" THEY don't seem to realize what would happen If that advice were ever really followed. The majority party in power would, of course, remain In power, the only possibility of change being through the slow process of death. And unless the members of one party died off faster than the other, there would be no change then. Imagine the situation today if the Democrats of 1938 could be depended upon "to vote 'cr straight" a year hence. Why worry over a platform, a candidate, or anything else? Democratic victory, with a popular vote of 27,000,000 to only 16,000,000 lor the opposi tion four years ago would be assured, so the boys who really run conventions, and after election the party machinery, would be able to do anything they might wish, and be certain of getting away with it. THE same with the Republican party, !f the practice so consist ently advised were followed after a G. O. P. triumph. In 1928, for example, over 21,000,000 people voted the Repub lican ticket (Hoover) and only 13,000,000 the Democratic ticket (Smith). Could anyone have depended upon subsequent loyalty to party, then a Republican victory in 1932 would have been certain. Instead of that the popular vote In that year was nearly 23,000,000 for the Democratic candidate (Roosevelt) and less than 18.000.00U for the Republican (Hoover). The partisan situation exactly re versed. "VBVIOUSLY, the Independent voter did that. He not only keeps the two parties guessing, thus spurring each to outdo the other In promising betterments which the rank and file desire But he and his associates hold the balance of power, determine every four years, In whose hands the political control of the country shall rest. In short, the Independent voters really run the country, although few people realize It. And yet every four years the partisan ballyhooeri, like John entirely agrees with Senator D. M. Hamilton now, arise on their metacarpals, and urge all the boys and girls to stand by their ticket and vote 'er straight. It is difficult to understand why they do this, for it is so obvious to anyone that NOT since this American democracy was founded has any considerable number followed such advice. And as time goes on fewer and fewer pay the slightest attention to any such snake-oil hocus pocus. Probably it's merely habit, just as boosting favorite sons and getting out campaign buttons is habit. IF SO, then it's a habit that, for both major parties, might better be marked by the breach rather than the observance. For that vote-er-straight philosophy is deader than Rameses the II, and any party that harks back to it immediately comes under the suspicion of being pretty dead from the collar band up. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to persuual health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number or letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. . VITE FOR THE GOOD The tongue is red, shiny, more pointed than the tongue of a healthy individual, and feels sore or burn- ing the sensi tiveness of the tongue is often ascribed to "acid fruits" to other items of diet. Tongue c o n d i tion is called glossitis. All m u s cle t i s sue (volun tary or skele tal muscle such as the muscu lar wall of stomach and intes tine, the heart muscle and the muscular layer in the artery wall) is lacking in tone, func tionally weak, easily fatigued. Blood test usually fails to con firm idea of "anemia." There is a constant feeling of general malaise, that wretched, uneasy feeling which is so pro nounced when one is coming down with grip or similar ill ness. These are some of the com mon complaints of people who have nothing in particular the matter but want of vite. As a rule they are not conscious of many of these manifestations, or if they are not much concerned, probably because so many peo ple are in the same condition that they consider it normal. For that matter they belong In the third level of health where most of the 75 percenters are content to drift along, assuming fhet such health as they happen to have is a matter of chance , or fortune and hence there is no reason for striving to attain the higher grade, the top level, where the DO percenters are. The 90 percenters are people who, sometimes through chance or fortune, more often through steady and consistent effort of their own, have vite. Vite is a word coined by our renders to express the following: Preservation of the character istics of youth, better-than-ave-rage nutritional condition as manifested in lower death-rates, better growth and development, extension of the prime of life In Doth directions, material im provement of the life expecta tion of adults, higher average level of positive health through out the life cycle, greater pep. more vitality, the highest degree of natural immunity, an ade quate fund of reserve power to tide over emergencies and strains, the resiliency of the un tamed animal or the primitive savage. Familiar terms the 75 per The Capital Parade By Joseph Alsop and Robert Kintner Released by The North American Newspaper Alliance, Ino. Washington, Nov. 16. In a quietly simmering controversy over national defense power needs, there is a chance for an other new deal vs. power busi ness battle on a TVA scale. At the controversy's heart Is a dis agreement over whether cast ing power facilities are ade quate to meet possible wartime requirements. Power pifllcy Is the chief rrinslnlng preoccupation of the new deal group In the administration. Through the National Power Poiu-y committee, of which Secretary of the Interior Har old L. I,-ke la chairman, the new dealers are urging the utilities com panies to accept government aid In i building new equipment. The utlll j ties companies, fearful of a Trojan horse, are nervously arguing that their equipment is quite ,cood emMinh alresdy. thank vou. I The curious thing is thst the new dealers, whose greatest pleasure used P5 -- Brady, M.D. OLD WINTER TIME centers apply to their condition are run down," "weak nerves," "poor assimilation," "low resist ance, "tired feeling," "poor cir culation and "no ambition." QUESTIONS Si ANSWERS A Blooming Menace I have a good reason to feel grate ful to you 22 pounds of It, In fact. I was a veritable spectre a year ago. weighing 98 pounds, height five feet six lnches( I will be 24 years old this month). The suggestion I found In your column was that Insulin treat ment helps sklnnles to put on needed flesh. It Is wonderful to meet friends you haven't seen for some time and hear them exclaim that you have changed from a holy fright to a positive menace to the community. My doctor gave me about forty shots of Insulin the first month, three a week after that, and I put on twenty, two pounds weight In three months. I expect to be' right up to normal In another month. (Miss M. B.) Answer For holy frights who can't have Insulin treatment I would sug gest at least an optimal dally ration of vitamin B complex as a supple ment to any diet they follow, vita min B complex has an effect on car bohydrate assimilation similar to that of Insulin. I have a monograph on "Gaining Weight" which any reader may have on request Inclose a stamped envelope bearing your address. Tinnitus Last June I wrote for advice about head noises. In the psmphlet on deafness and headnolsea you recom mended vitamin B-complex tablets Have been taking them every day for nearly four months, also your Iodln Ration. I find I am cured of these head- noises. My blood pressure, formerly very slow. Is now up to normal, my doctor says. I am greatly Improved physically and I feci grateful to you. Knowing your collection I am send ing you a pipe which I hope you will enjoy. (L. A. E.) Answer Thank you. If the pipe gets to me you never can tell. Once a fruit Importer sent me a bunch of bananas, and montha afterward the boys In the orrice assured me they were the best bananas they' had over et. Once a reader drove forty miles to bring me somi fresh goat's milk that, too, seemed all right to the boys who so willingly expose themselves to such hazards In my de fense. I am glad to send the mono graph on Deafness and Head Noises (tinnitus) to any reader on request (no clipping, please). Inclose a stamped envelope bearing your ad dress. Save Your Teeth Have you any literature on care of the teeth? (Miss H. W.) Answer Send twenty-five cents coin and s. a a. for booklet "Save Your Teeth." (Protected by John P. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. IVIIIIam Brady. M. D J6S El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. to be a good rough-and-tumble scrap with a few utilities executives, an extremely anxious to settle the con troversy amicably. They say that, having signed and sealed a peace with the utilities aftr the capture of the Tennessee valley, they do not wish to go to war again. The utili ties executives, on the other hsnd. prlvstely accuse the new dealers of attempting to Infringe the TV A peace terms, which called for no further encroachments In the power business. The controversy's history Is lsugh ably typical of the course of government-business relations. Last fall, when national defense became a I pressing problem, the president nsmed a nstlonal defense power com mittee under Assistant Secretary of War Louis Johnson. Johnson cslled In Wendell U Wlllkle. Edward Drees, beck. Floyd Carlisle and several oth er great men In the power business Several Inspirational rallies were held, but tangible results were In conspicuous. Then, a few weeks ago, the national defense power commit tee's duties were transferred to the national power policy committee, which has always been the spesrhesd of the new deal's aggressive power program. The national defense power com mittee's chief labor was a survey rinding national power facilities "woefully Iscklng." On looking Into the problem, the national power pol icy committee confirmed Its predeces sor's conclusions. Worst bottle-necks, according to the committee, were the lack of pro duction capacity In certain strategic localities, and the almoat complete absence of high tension transmission lines hooking the great existing sys tems togetlier. The committee de cided there was room for additional expenditures bv the utilities of stvut S300.ooo.POO shove normsl. The government. It suggested, ought to nut over a3000.000.000 Into the high tension hook-up Unes (which bring no profit to the private sys tems) and Into expansion of TVA. utilisation of the St. Lawrence and other apeclal projects. Tha question Immediately arose aa to who was to have the management of the government-financed llnea and production plants. Acting Secretary of the Navy Charlea Edison, urged on by conser vative advisers, complicated matters by auggeatlng that all government Investment ought to Mke the form of subsidies to the utilities compan ies. To the members of the nstlonal power policy committee, this was sheer heresy. They voted down Edi son, and arranged to attempt a deal with the utilities companies. Meanwhile the leaders of the pow er business, suspicious of their an cient enemies, had three unpleasant thoughta: (1) that another govern ment power program like TVA waa being disguised as national defense; 12) that the new dealers were also trying to cloak a new apendlng lendlng program In a handsome gar ment; and (3) that the new high tension lines would give the govern ment a grip on auch great Intra state utilities companies aa Public Service of New Jersey. Consolidated Edison and Niagara-Hudson. For all these reasons, the utilities leaders are thinking of digging their toea In, and telling the new dealers they are Oreeka bearing gifts, They have already declared that the aup posed lack of power facilities Is strictly Imaginary. The controversy would certainly end In a grand public row. If It were not for Its most striking feature the new dealer's desire for a friendly settlement. They have adopted a principle which seems wise, that peacetime needs should be met by the utilities, wartime needs by the government. They may deal on this oasis, pending the outcome, their good Intentions are another sign of the new spirit Invading the government-business relationship. At the National Capitol With JohnW. Kelly (Continued from Pae One.) denunciation. And, despite the state department had given its blessing, Secretary of State Cor dell Hull charged the proposed transfer as a breach of faith with the people. HERE were high officials of the government at loggerhead!, one accusing the other of violating the spirit of a neutrality law sponsored by the administration. This unex pected boomerang of public senti ment caused Mr. Roosevelt, at Hyde Park, to delay the transfer to the Panama flag until the storm blew over. Mr. Roosevelt did not agree with his secretary of state that the shift in registry was breaking faith; the president Insisted It was quite legal. The change would prevent the ship operators from losing money, not withstanding that thousands of sea men would lose their Jobs. IT IS reported that when the U. S. Lines attain Panama r'glstry they will operate out of New York, as usual, and British warships will con voy these boats across the Atlantic. The British are supposed to begin the convoy shortly after these once American ships leave the United States. There Is nothing, perhaps, to prevent German submarines to lay In wait off the coast to sink the convoy and the ships of the U. S. Lines. TAKEN by and large, as with the court fight, the president's ap proval Is receiving heartiest condem nation from democratic sources. THOSE Indefatigable government workers who study crops predict that the Pacific Northwest will t3 an outstanding section for fruits and tree nuts for the next five years. The forecast may not please the growers, for increased production does not mean Increased prices. Oregon and Washington are the only filbert areas in the United States. Production of these nuts will go up until 1945. Same with English walnuts. Little, if any. Increase in prices Is expected and foreign demand is curtailed. Oregon-Washington will have 4 mil lion bushels of peaches this year and In these states production is In creasing. An upward trend In production of pears tn the Pacific Northwest Is noted, with export situation unfavor able. The winter varieties (mostly exported) will show Increased pro duction. There will be more cherries and an Increased froeen pack: larger acreage of strawberries. Of the var ious fruits, the only decrease tn pro duction is looked for in dried prunes, which will slowly decrease until 1946. Export of prunes Is also uncertain because of the war. ON THE other hand, the weather bureau (section of the depart ment of agriculture), says a drouth is In the Pacific Northwest, the Washington wheat belt being much too dry and the outlook for the drier areas the poorest in years. In eastern Oregon there is some needing in dust, but much wheat Is still unsown. The drouth has spread practically across the continent. Destroyers To Duly Washington, Nov. 17. iP) The navy ordered two more World war destroyers into act ive service today to reinforce the neutrality patrol. They were the Branch, tied up at Philadel phia, and the Laub. at San Diego. Officials said 71 of the 110 ships in the destroyer re serve fleet had now been ordered recommis$ioned. Dm uall robust want USA. In The Day's News By Frank Jenkins. INTERESTING question: Is lit tle Finland set to call big Russia's bluff? It rather looks like it. If Stalin fights Finland, he'll have to drop his peace mask. SIDELIGHT in today's news: A German soldier, fully equipped with rifle and pack, goes to sleep on a train headed for Switzerland. The Swiss awaken him on their side of the border and inform him he will be interned for the duration of the war. If you were in his place. would you be chagrined or PLEASED? A THOUGHT, inspired by the news of the day: If war between nations is bad (as we know it is) how about INDUSTRIAL WAR? The cure for industrial war is the same as the cure for war between nations more common sense on the part of EVERYBODY. 'THE U. S. Antarctic expedi- tion, under the command of Byrd, gets off from Boston, ill- starred snow cruiser and all. If it was YOUR OWN MONEY you were spending, would you send a land-claiming expedition to the frozen wastes of the Antarctic? Probably not. But if somebody else furnished the money, you'd go along for the excitement. A BONANZA gold strike has been made in GEORGIA of all places. The state geologist says the ore assays $60,000 to the ton. He describes the find as a "vein of quartz, two inches of thickness and of unknown depth, so thoroughly impreg nated with gold over approxi mately 10 inches that it appears as one continuous ribbon of yel low metal. Its apparent richness is comparable with that of the Comstock lodge (in Nevada), which yielded $340,000,000 in gold between 1859 and 1890.' Gold, as all miners agree, is where you find it. pORONADO, t h e Spaniard, who crossed the continent from Florida nearly four cen turies ago, seeking gold and FINDING NONE, may turn over in his grave when his spirit hears of this strike practically at the point from which he started. CUESS WHO ?vith . pocket comb Patricia Honey chile" 'Wilder, actress from Macon, Ga mimicked a rerlain dictator she met while abroad. She's now on way to Hollywood. p n- -.i r I GREAT hTyTzij f Flight 0' Time Medfnrd and Jackson County History trom the file ol tha Mall Tribune 10 tnd !0 rears TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 16, 1929. (It was Saturday.) xt nnn,. fWonts Troians. iiuuc iaiit. 13 to 12. before crowd of 123,000 in Chicago. i ni.a Pnhorl Ham- IV1I. UI1M inif, i.vj""- mond among local people at tendee football came at Eugene today with O.A C. Detroit sales of Boscs tops market. Tentative county budget calls for the raising of 5315,768 by county tax levy next year. Medford Chest fund goes over top. Survey made for Williams creek road cut-off shows dis tance to coast lessened. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 16. 1919. (It was Sunday.) Civil war is threatened In Washington, as I W.W.'s reported to be arming. President Wilson announces fight against the Lodge reser vation to the peace treaty. "Pussyfoot" Johnson, Anti-Saloon league organizer, may lose his eye. Work on the Prospect-Crater Lake road is stopped for the winter. Revival meeting starts at Methodist church. Eamon D'Valera, president of Ireland, passes through city on southbound train. Coal strike situation In east near crisis. Communications The Audubon Warbler. To the Editor: Our winter tourists among the birds are commencing to arrive. Some of the first Audubon warb lers are now to be seen in the gardens, in the orchards. They are busy at work cleaning up the insect pests These warb lers come from the forests of the Canadian zone, where they have spent the summer raising their young. By the untrained observer, this warbler is sometimes con fused with the sparrow. The former can be distinguished trom a sparrow necause of the yellow on the back, which shows in flight. The bill of the warb ler, too, is the pointed bill of the insect eater. That of the sparrow is the broad, seed-cracking bill of the finch family. Every growing child should early learn the difference be tween the hiore sober-coloied warblers, such as the Audubon, which are helping win the war by being busy daily eliminating the food-destroying insects, and the common pest, the English sparrow. C. M. Goethe. 7th and J Sts., Sacramento, Cal. a WOULD CLEAR UP w II Salem, Nov. 15. r.-F) Clari fication of a 1939 law adooting a new code relative to fore closure of delinquent taxes was sought today in a suit filed in Marion county circuit court ask ing for a declaratory judgment. The suit, filed bv Leon N. Childs against Sheriff A C. Burk. District Attorney Lyle J. Page and the county court, asks the circuit court to rule when foreclosure proceedings shall be instituted and whether a de scription of all real property on the foreclosure list shall be included in the ioreclosure pro ceedings. The new law provides that property on which there are three years' delinquent taxes shall be put on the foreclosure list. 1 "I S T