PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1939.
Bmm1 Mi UmJI frihJM."
Dally Kioept tar day.
Publiih1 by
UBDrORD PBINTINO CO.
HIT1I No Wr BL PhoMU
ROBERT W RUHU KiUor.
ERNEST R Qli.STH Al Uttntgar.
torA Or-goa. unir Act f Utrch I. Uli
UUSCRIPTION RATE!
By Mall In Aivanc:
Dally and Sunday aa fur ...lit!
Dally and Sunday H tnontha... I
Dall? and Suuday ihr month .0
Da llf aod Similar on monir. . . Tl
by CarrlBr 1 Ad wane Mad Cord, Aah-
land. Cantral Pvnt. Jaekwnllla 0ld
Hill. Rngua Riw. Pboanls. TaJaot
and to motor routaa:
Dtll? and Sunday n yaar . . . ,
Dally and Sun-lay -on moolb -tl
All wrmi eaab in adanca
Ofrictnl Pbpw of the Tlly ot Mwdford
OrrtriNt Papw ot jBiltB Counlj.
MKMIIKH OP l-IIB ARMICIA TKI PKKaW
BM-HTlBI mil lMIra mrm nrv.
Tha Aoeiatd Praaa la iciail
ntltiad lo tha (ot public.. Hon of alt
dupatchaa cradliad (o II or othar
wlaa crad'iad to thi papar aod alao It
tha local ntvi pubilahad haraln
AH rtihlP tnr publication of pela
MalMBDHS OS UNITED PRESS
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OP CIRCULATIONS
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Office In Naw ToU. Chlcaga DatrolL
flan Pranrlaco Uoa Angalaa. Saattla.
Portland, fit lonn Atlanta. Vnneouwr.
n
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
The Eugene high school foot
ball squad, on their all oppon
ents selection, accord Medford
one berth on the second team.
They at least recall Medford
played them, so the memory of
an artistic 20 to 6 trouncing
lingers.
...
Unfailing signs of Christmas
are showing up. From big
towns comes news stories of
misers, dead from lack of food,
with $78,000 sewed in their
shirt tails.
Robert Taft, of Ohio, looms
as a G.O.P. presidential nom
inee. The older voters can re
member when his father was
president, and many were mad
at him, for no reason except
he was a fat man.
...
WHAT A OAI.
(Pleasant (Mo.) Tlmea)
"818 Clebbler bought a gallon of
elder eight wecka ago.2 Whether ahe
knew It had turned, or hot, we've
no falnteat Idea, but the fact remalna
ahe drank several glaaaes of It Sunday
morning, before Betting out for Sun
day school, and that Inatcad of turn
ing up at Sunday achool, waa aeen
an hour later throwing rocka at In- j
aulators on the phone Una three mllea .
east ot town on Gunpowder Creek '
road." I
...
It's so cold, the fair sex will
even venture a warm glnncc at
the red flnnncls on display in
the store windows.
...
The Premier of Englnad plans
to "remake Europe," his latest
speech hints, and form the "U.
S. of Europe." All should wish
him better luck than one Rex
Tugwell had in the 1933 "re
making of America."
...
"COMMON HORSE SENSE
HELD NEED." (Hdline Del
Norte, Calif.. Triplicate). If no
horse is handy, take a chance
with what is left.
...
The dying squeal of the fatted
hog Is heard again in the coun
try sausage regions.
...
One of the Older Girls has
a good joke on "Rosy" Rosen
batim. The esteemed Oregonian
miscucd and called the Espee's
crack train, the "crock train."
HELD POOR REDS
Portland, Nov. 28 ID The
Communist party may be using
the American Student Union as
a tool but the Reed college
branch is an "unsatisfactory"
implement, President Dexter M.
Keezrr of Reed said last night.
"I have no first-hand know
ledge hut I would not be sur
prised if it developed the com
munist has sought to use the . . .
union as Its tool In American
colleges and universities in gen
eral and ot Reed college In par
ticular," Keener said, "hut t
would be greatly surprised If
the party has not found the Reed
branch of the A S.U. a most
unsatisfactory tool."
Bandon Drugglit Killed
Portland. Nov. 28. (!) In
juries suffered in an automo
bile accident near McMinnville
October 2 took the life of Hugh
Brandon, B0. drug store opera
tor, yesterday.
Now Preiidential Bee
Minneapolis. Nov. 28. (tVi
J. E. Williams of Sioux Falls.
S. D., arrived here today to
open headquarters for Hanford
MacNider of Mason City, la., as
Republican presidential aspirant.
Beware of Night Driving
M
OTOR CAR fatalities are
dark than before. The
winter than in the summer, mainly due to slippery condition of '
the highways.
The exact cause of the shocking tragedy early Monday morn
ing, when Mrs. Elizabeth Young and her daughter Dorothy, were
killed a few miles south of Medford, has not been exactly deter
mined, and probably won't be. But the most likely explanation
is that the one who was driving, Just as they were nearing their
home after a long and tiring journey from San Francisco, dozed
momentarily at the wheel, with the inevitable result, a shatter
ing crash and sudden death!
ALL Medford mourns the loss of these well known and much
beloved women, a loss the harder to bear, because one
always feels in such cases that it might so easily have been
avoided.
Too late now of course, but the tragedy brings into sharp
relief, a belief long held by this department, namely:
Never take a long motor trip after sundown if it can possibly
be avoided, motor long stretches with the sun, NOT without it.
If night driving CAN'T be avoided, then:
Never try to make time, always drive at reduced speed.
And fight drowziness as you would the devil a thermos of
hot coffee being an invaluable aid in this direction.
Advice to Senator Taft
THEY say Senator Taft's presidential bee has-been doing better,
since it stung the guests at the Washington Press club
dinner, last winter.
Well we hope so, the Ohio
deserving young man, ana we wouia line to see mm mane nis
mark in big-league politics, rather than duplicate the rather sad
experience of his distinguished father.
But if Mr. Taft's recent remarks to the farmers of the corn
belt, are a gauge of his vision and statesmanship, we doubt if
that quotation on his presidential stock is much higher even today
than Trans-America's.
FR according to press reports, his three reasons for voting the
Republican ticket a year hence, are:
Keep the country out of war,
Balance the budget,
Do away with unemployment.
Of course that's just dandy. But Senator, why not add:
"Enforce the 10 commandments and support the law of gravityl"
In short this sort of talk is, to express it mildly, old STUFF,
hackneyed, time-serving hokum, which the people of this coun-
try, Including the corn-belt, got
and now greet with a yawn.
EVERYONE wants peace, and intends to keep out of war.
EVERYONE wants the national budget balanced.
EVERYONE wants an end to unemployment.
The question is not who favors these desirable achievements,
both parties do, but HOW to bring them about.
DECLARING the Democratic party has a bad record regarding
war while the Republicans haven't, is, again to observe
restraint, not particularly adult or particularly convincing.
Certainly anyone who seriously wishes the presidential nomi
nation should be able to think
than that.
WE don't suppose the Senator from Ohio will follow our
advice or even see it, but we are going to give It to
him, nevertheless, for what it's worth.
Here it is, in general terms:
Don't try to make peace, or unemployment, or even budget
balancing partisan issues, for all that is Just molasses to catch
flies, and all sane and sensible people know it.
Be sensible yourself. Don't try to bamboozle the electorate
with make-believe and hocus pocus, throw all that time worn
buncombe overboard and tell them the truth.
And the truth is, as we see it, this:
The Republican party is the Business Man's party, always has
been, probably always will be. That is both its weakness and
its strength.
The Democratic party is the reform party, always has been
and probably always will be. It Is the party that proudly boasts
placing human above property rights. That also is its weakness
and its strength.
Well the country has had, or will have had next November,
eight years of the reform party, and while great good has been
accomplished, the crying need now is not for more reform, but
foi more sound and sane business MANAGEMENT.
NO matter WHICH party is victorious, this country is not going
to send another army to Europe, or anywhere else.
No matter WHICH Is victorious, there is going to be some
unemployment, in the future, as there has been in the past.
Everyone wants the budget balanced, and eventually it must
be, but it won't be until taxes are materially raised, and widely
extended, and regardless of the political label that may be borne,
the PARTY IN POWER, is always opposed to that.
However as the Business Man's party, the Republicans are
better fitted to bring THAT end other material betterments
about, than the Reform or Democratic party, so if you want that
and several other desirable things done, Mr. and Mrs. Public,
why go to the polls and vole the Republican ticket!
THAT politically, rather than partisanly, speaking is the long
and short of it.
The Republicans by the nature of things, have a case, and
considering the Democratic record
are concerned, a pretty strong case.
Stress that fact, for the greatest ally any political party can
hnve. the truth. is behind it!
Forget the rest of the song and dance, for realistically speaking
there is neither truth nor reality in it.
Held For Slaying
Portland. Nov. 28. (D The
Multnomah county grand Jury
indicted Clarence V. Winesrt,
55, on a first-degree murder
charge yesterday. Winesett Is
accused of shouting to death
Mrs. Amelia Zink, mother of
three children, Nov. 3 after she
refused his offer of ninrriniie.
Cm Mall Tribune aut ada.
nearly 60 more numerous after
proportion is even greater In the
senator is a hard working and
, .
wise to at least two decades ago,
up something more persuasive I
s far as material conditions I
Unions Kaap Out
Tortland, Nov. 28. A') The
...
roruanci central uanor uninru
refused to take sides in the
peoples' utilitv district dispute
here but went on record last
nuht for higher wages and bet -
ter workino condition in both
icr worKins lonomons in ooin
private and public utilities.
Almost all metals are found
Imbedded in rock.
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to peraunal health and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, wilt bo answered by Or. Bradj It stamped Kit
addressed ntelop Is endued Letter ihould bo brief and written m ink
Owing to the tone number ot letter received only a few can bo answered
No reply can bo made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Addrtat
Dr. William Brady, ISS El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
80 YOU HAVE SOME TONSIL STLLf
Thirty years ago, so powerful
was propaganda as distinguished
from education, the medical pro
fession looked upon all tonsil
tissue as evil.
That attitude
accounted for
the indiscrim
Inate practice
of rem oving
tonsils and ad
enoids on a
wholesale plan
when you and
I were young
Maggie. In the
days of whole
sale tonsil and
aaenold atroc
ity any kid who opened his
mouth for a while and forgot to
close it again when the nurse,
or even a smart teacher was
giving the class the once over
for material for the tonsil clinic,
was as good as on the wagon
Or if the child happened to be
slightly deaf, or listless from
any deficiency of health or nu
trition, or handicapped by rea
s"n of Pr vision, there was
I always a bad chance that he
would be accused of having
adenoids and be hustled off to
the clinic.
It was really remarkable how
many youngsters survived the
crude surgery perpetrated in
that era. That the disastrous
consequences or complications
in comparatively few instances
did not deter either the public
or the profession from continu
ing the practice of removing
tonsils and adenoids on the
slightest pretexts, is further evi
dence of the power of propa
ganda against education.
Today, however, the rank and
file of the profession and the
better informed public have a
more conservative view of the
matter. Adenoid tissue (it is
the same type of tissue whether
n the throat or faucial tonsils,
the phyaryngeal tonsil or ade
noid body or elsewhere) is now
regarded as normal and func
tionally useful tissue and the
more competent physician or
specialist endeavors to protect
or save it instead of trying to
destroy or remove it.
That change in view, brought
about by better education, ac
counts for the tremendous de
cline In the number of tonsil
and adenoid operations done
in recent years.
Some of the older readers
may recall that I got the verv
devil from the powers that be
for my temerity In advocating
the more conservative electro
surgical or diathermy extirpa
tion of infected tonsils in place
of "the old Spanish custom" not
so many years ago. It is a sat
The
Capital
Parade
By Joseph AJsop
and
Robert Kintner
Released by The North
American Newspaper
Alliance, Ino,
Washington, Nov. 27. Unob
served by all but a few score
of government officials and big
business men, a striking new
development has appeared in
the vital field of government
business relations. This is noth
ing less than the perfection of
an informal technique, combin
ing persuasion and psychological
pressure, by which the admin
istration directly participates in
matters of private business pol
icy affecting the general wel-
I fare.
For example, the United
States Steel corporation will
soon announce the steel price
for the next quarter. Steel pro
duction is running at capacity;
the backlog of orders is huge,
and past practice in the steel in
dustry would suggest the inevit
ability of a marked price rise.
If past practice should be fol
lowed, other prices of all sorts
would rise with the steel price.
if
lor sicel is the bell wether of which would otherwise hare to ro
our economy. Such price rises, through tha Whita Houar. if itwi
which are thought to contract I "hould defy ihe prophets and raisa
demand and reduce production, I rrtcea altfr all. officials ot U 8.
are greatly feared by govern-j S""01 would certainly be called b
mental economists of the school'10"' ,h" TNEC 10 P'" "nd d.
of SEC Commissioner Leon ! f'nrt ,h"r ctlon- ,t"'1 "'
iiennerson, commissioner
of!
l.w S,,,i- I.,- ,,,:
-
"d . Lauchlin Currie. economic :
'iser to the president. ,
' "an ";' '
; ''"r 'i, v' " , "'Tn ;
" T' prediction i
rtimi'.cd. other pricea will prob-;
,hiy remain in line. Unless the p ir.
;emment thinkers are rtcctved. the
1 upward ur;e of prosperity will ion.
unue with only a abort inter aet- ,
Brady, M.D.
isfaction to note now that many
of the medical brethren who
were most severe in criticizing
my teaching about this 10 or
IS years ago are today either
using the diathermy method or
recommending it, particularly
for handicapped patients.
Yet a few old-timers still
use a rather shameless argu
ment to persuade some of their
unsophisticated customers to
submit to the guillotine and
snare atrocity. They tell the
prospective patient that the dia
thermy method "does not get
all of the tonsil." Oh, well,
as long as so many laymen
can't or won't read the daily
papers beyond the larger head
lines, what can you do about
such conditions?
qi'ESTIONS AND ANSWEIW
Tonsils and Singing.
My living dependa on my voloe.
I nave bad tonsils and doctors ad
vise removal, but I have known of
two cases where the singing voloe
was ruined alter tonsil removal.
(O. A. H.)
Answer There need be no hazard
to the voice if you have the electro
coagulation (diathermy) method. Of
course you will beware of having
any other than a physician of re
pute treat you.
The Plmplea of Youth.
For over a year my face haa been
a eight with blackheada and plm-
pies. i nave taken several kinds
of blood purifying medicine and
It seema to have no effect. (T. C
K.)
Answer Too bad you have never
taken physiology, hygiene or health
courses In achool. such Instruction
would at least protect you against
the absurdity of "blood purifying"
nostrums. Send a stamped envelope
bearing your address and ask for
monograph on Acne. That la the
name of the oondltlon, almost phys
iological In youth, commonly known
aa blackheads and pimples.
Sinus Heudache.
Took cold alx weeks ago. Have
Buffered ever since with what the
doctor here calls neuralgia. The
pain seema all through my head.
and behind the eyes. Had glasses
fitted, but no relief . . . (Mlsa J. E.)
Answer What you mean when
you say "took cold" is Sanskrit to
me. If the beginning of the trouble
waa coryza or aore throat, the cause
of the pain may be alnuaitts, per
haps ethmoidal or sphenoidal sinus
itis. Having glasses , fitted was a
allly ' waste of money. Why not
consult a nose and throat apeclallat
for dlagnosla and treatment ot the
trouble One your doctor will rec
ommend, one whose advice your doc
tor will carry out. This the truly
economical management of auch
trouble In any circumstance.
(Protected by John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. D set El
Camilla, Bevrrly Hills, Calif.
back. And all this may be achieved
by application of the new technique
to the steel Industry.
The technique la of comparatively
recent origin, a can ba seen by the
fact that U. 8. 8teel upped It prices
In December, 1930, and again In Feb
ruary. 137, both times deaplftf the
outraged protests of the administra
tion. It dates. In fact, to the estab
lishment of reasonably good rela
tions between certain sectors of big
business and the government. This
process began only a couple of years
ago when Averell Harrlman of the
business advisory council sent a
pleasant stock -broker friend, Prent
iss Cononley, down to Washington,
to act as a lifts ion man between bus
iness and government. Coonley be
gan giving a serle of get-together
dinners, and at these dinners men
of the caliber of U. S. Steel's Ed
ward Setettlnlus and the White
House's Thomas O. Corcoran met
and got to know one another.
Perhaps the 'trst Instance of tha
techniques application In a rough
way was In the spring of 1938, when
U. S. Steel was considering a depression-Induced
wage-cut. Joseph P.
Kennedy, who was then In this
country, was hastily mobilized. Cor
coran and hig partner, Benjamin V.
Cohen. Joined Kennedy tn negotiat
ing with Stettlnlus and other re pre-
' made pretty plain that. If big I
... -.I .v.- ,m 1 i
blame the economic consequences on
the company. The board of direc
tors then unanimously voted to main
tain the wage wale, and. In his fire
side chat beginning his summer va
cation, the president offered a hand
some compliment to the steel lead
ers. Since then, the technique has been
somewhat refined by th creation of
the temrorary national economic
committee. This body, commonly
known as the monopoly committee,
serves aa the vehicle for publicity
wctuin ,:o r suD.lrcted to what-
"" ol;,rr pain, ana inronTraiMK
ihf administration could arise.
,ntn.,i contact . stettm-
m and his collrvua. are wll aware
or facta, and will naturally be
mrl"'n b" ,h"r
, ,.,,,.
Aa to the extent oi thl Influence.
tlw-re Is a wide dKprlty of opinion.
Bu.:r.e men. who r.at'jrally retard
tha new tecJuHnut as an Inirlnie-
mont on their freedom, sUnultaneotu-
ly complain ot this and state that
I they really aren't Influenced after
I all. The government men probably
I entertain exaggerated notions ot
their own Importance. Nevertheless,
the new technique Is quite definitely
a fact, and. being quiet, flexible, not
euraed with the usual Irritation of
regulatory bureaucracy and on the
whole friendly. It la an extremely In
t resting fact. Nor la It unprece
dented, for numerous parallela exist
In England.
Blnea publicity it the government
men's real weapon, there la a sort ot
democratic check on them, tf they
go too far, the business men can
tell them, "publlah and be damned."
The technique haa already been ap
plied In other directions, notably to
the oil bualneas, which waa recently
called before the TNEC to give an
account of Itself. It la undoubtedly
due for the further development,
and deserves to be watched and teat
ed with care, and without prejudice.
At the
National Capitol
With
John W. Kelly
(Continued Iron Pnm Ont.)
they have plenty of business
in sight.
It burns up the cement manu
facturers and they are telling
the commission that government
shipping agencies are offering
tonnage lower than the west
coast can meet. This, argues
the industry, is putting the west
coast out of the picture as far
as Panama business is concern
ed, and the attitude of the gov
ernment agencies is a real dis
crimination against the Pacific
northwest and California.
STAT
it
TATE department Isn't aware of
yet, but the same strategy
that waa Invoked to defeat Mr.
Roosevelt's court packing bill la be
ing pursued to bring to an end the
trade treaties -which have caused so
much complaint among lumbermen,
shingle mills, stockmen and agri
culture in Oregon and Washington.
The act on which all trade agree
ments are based expires June 13,
1940, unless it Is extended before
that date by the senate.
Under the constitution the sen
ate must approve of all treaties.
Early In the honeymoon of Mr.
Roosevelt and the new deal congress,
the senate blg-heartedly delegated to
the President the authority to make
trade agreements which essentially
are actually treaties. Mr. Roosevelt
wanted this power and when he
was Invested with It he, In turn,
delegated If to Secretary of State
Hull and he passed It on to under
lings whose anonomlty . haa been
carefully preserved. The state de
partment arranges the treaty, It re
ceives the signature of the Presi
dent and the senate haa no more
to aay In the matter than Adam.
THROUGHOUT the land at least
west of the Mississippi agricul
ture feels that these agreement are
Injurious and want them abolished.
Defenders of the trade agreement
program reply that advocates of re
peal ( National Orange, etc.) are
anxious to return to the Hawley
Smoot tariff. The tariff bill bearing
the names of Oregon's WlUla Hawley
and Utah's Reed Smoot Is supposed
to scare farmers and all others Into
fit. However, to keep the record
straight, chief beneficiaries of that
tariff were the heavy Industries and
It la the heavy Industries who will
Join the administration In the fight
to extend the treaties. The heavy
Industries win, coming or going. It
appears,
STRATBOT on the court fight,
planned by Oregon's McNary as
Republican lesder, was to restrain
Republicans from denouncing the
White House program and let the
Democrats (Montana's Wheeler. Ne
vada's McCarran. Nebraska's Burke)
carry the ball. Republicans sat back
and watched Democrats fight the
President's bill, believing that tf the
Republicans sttacked It would ap
pear like a partisan Issue and the
conservative Democrat would pull In
their necks and swing over to the
President.
Western and southern Democratic
senators are beginning to wall at
trade agreements as they find prod
ucts of their states being sacrificed.
Democrats are becoming vocal, men
who are good new dealers. Repub
licans are withholding their criti
cism and enjoying the assistance
being given by the Democrats. Pew
Republicans will speak on the floor
against the trade agreement policy:
all. with the possible exception of
,,,
aylvanla's Davis (auto
and Penn-
automoblles and
steel), will vqte against extension
of the law.
Republicans intend carrying the
trads agreement question Into the
campaign and are of the opinion
that their stsnd against continuing
a policy prejudicial to agriculture
will win voters from tha Mtmuulnnt
J to the Pacific,
FRrQUT.NTLY divided, the senators
for Washington. Oregon. Cali
fornia. Idaho. Montana and othera
of the II western atate. are prac
tically a aolld unit for discontinuing
the law after June 13.
CONSTIPATION
NEEDS ATTENTION IN
YOUNG AND OLD
Bven "temporary" conatipatlon ll
nothlnu t trifle with. Wby delay
when 9tuarts Laxative Compound
he'.pa brlna auch quick welcome re
lief without hablt-formlng or bad
after-effecta? Stuart's i, wonderful
for all aces really works safely for
adults, yet gentle enough for chil
dren. Dosage actually reduces aa It
help nyularlr." To feel bright,
keep bowels rUtht. Try Stuart's Lax
ative Compound ntht away for It
safe, (tent reeutts. At all drug
stores asc and 60c undr maker .
mouej-baci guarantee.
In The
Day'
is
. 'News
Bf Frank Jenkins
It hadn't rained in California
since goodness knows when
until the night before the big
game and about half the morn
ing thereof. And on the day
after, it doesn't look as if it
ever would rain again.
The weather man sometimes
has a sardonic sense of humor.
IT WASN'T much of a game, as
oamaa an On A-eMw4 affaire
never are. But as a spectacle
the California-Stanford game
ALWAYS rates high. It .is one
of the nation's big feats of show
manship. The sports writers center
their colorful vocabularies on
what the coaches are able to
do (or not do) with the muscular
young men on their squads.
This writer is moved to say ad
miring words for what can be
done with assorted thousands of
student body members in the
way of providing a show that
leaves ine cash customer feel
ing that his $4.40 was well
spent.
That's something of an
achievement in itself.
A RATHER pretty girl with
snapping brown eyes, a
Stanford chrysanthemum and a
shrill voice with the carrying
power of a fire sirpn hart hr
chance right at the start of the
ursi quarter when the Indians
showed a couple of seconds of
flash. Her voice echoed back
from Mount Tamalpais, and 70,
000 fans caused in
mouthed admiration.
It was her last chance for
three heart-breaking quarters,
and by the fourth when the two
Stanford scores came, she'd giv
en it up and gone.
H
fUMAN nature is human na-
nature, wherever you find
it.
Barelv 70.0(10 tnortat.,
thered to see this contest for
the cellar championship in a
stadium that hnlHc 09 nnn r
Rose Bowl had been at stake,
ll would have been far other.
wise.
Say what you will, it takoc
a winner to raise the public's
pulse beat.
TWO minutes before the end,1
of the game, misled by a
husky firecracker ' somebody
loosed, the Bear rnnforc c.,,nnf
down on the field and did as
neat a job of goal post uproot
ing as will be seen in many a
day.
Coming back to the city, In
the endless double line of traf
fic, an ancient roadster filled
with students held 8 position
just ahead of this scribe and
one boy held a piece of goal
post a good three feet long. Sir
Lancelot himself never clasped
his mighty sword with greater
reverence.
It's great to be young on the
day of the big game. Don't let
any cynic speak to the contrary
in your presence.
McMinnville. Nov., 28.
Congress, at its last regular ses
sion, acted Aft An inrlonAnf4AHt
law-making body for the "first
time in seven years." Rep. Mott
(R-Ore.) told the eh amhpr nf
commerce yesterday.
He declared the session was
overshadowed by the special
neutrality session but was no
table for its national Ar.t
uvicnac
legislation.
Invest
WITH CONFIDENCE
nit y tar. '
The eonsiit.nt growth in Individual Tlng.
placed In this local, home savings Institution.
Each account Is Insured up to $5,000 bv an
SI or $5,000 opens an account, and liberal
dividends ara paid semiannually. Funds in
vested br Dac.mber tenth earn dividend, from
tha first.
JACKSON COUNTY FEDERAL
SAVINGS It LOAN ASSOCIATION
128 East Main
Flight (T Time
Medford tnd Jtckiuo Count?
History from the tiles or the
Mall Tribune 10 and 'CO yeart
CO.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
November 29, 1929
(It was Friday)
Commander (now an admiral)
Byrd reaches South Pole.
Remote, In Coos county, In
path of forest fire, and residents
plan to flee.
City ordinance provides regu
lation of public dances and
great civic ado is brewing.
Jackson county pays bounty
for four coyotes the past month.
City police to start campaign
against reckless driving on West
Main. .
Eleven perish in extreme cold
in middle west. Drouth con
tinues in this state with no rain
in sight.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 29, 1919
(It was Saturday)
Christmas shopping season to
open Monday night with big
parade downtown.
Mercury drops to 18 degrees
above provising the coldest No
vember in city in years.
Federal operation of coal
mines expected to start next
Monday.
The work of placing Christ
mas trees on the Main street
lamp posts starts and gives a
Yule appearance to the business
district.
Prices of hotcakes In local
restaurants to be raised to 20
cents from 15 cents, due to the
high cost of living.
Newcomb Carlton, president
of the Western Union, visits his
brother Edward, at Table Rock.
Auto Workers Return
Detroit, Nov. 28. (P) Ap
proximately 600 workers en
tered the Chrysler main Dodge
plant today without incident
other than the booes of several
thousand members of the United
Automobile Workers union
(CIO) on the picket line. Special
police details were on duty.
Use Mall Tribune want ada.
MANY NEVER
SUSPECT CAUSE
OF BACKACHES
ThU Old Treatment Often
Brings Happy Relief
Maw miffwn rettera nigging bavcktrhi
quirlcly, once they discover that the rl mum
their tronble tr.iv be tired kidnevs.
The kidnfy are S'eture'e chit! way of taking
"cidi nd waste out of the blood.
UK. p most PPl Pasa about 3 pinta a dav.
heu diaorder of kidney function permit
potaonoui matter to remain in your blood, ft
Kay caua nagging backache, rheumatic patna,
leg pai na, loea of pep and eoergv, getting up
Bighta. ewellmg, puffins under the eyes, head
ache and dimness. Freauent or scanty paa
tagea ith smarting and Burning sometimes
lhows there is something wrng with your
kidneys or bladder.
Don't wait! Aek your drnegirt for Dean's
Fills, wed uceesnfuliy by millions (or over 40
years. They give happy relief and will help the
lft milee of kidney tubes flush out poisonous
waste from your blood. Get Doan'a Pilla.
SO THERE'S
NOTHING NEW
ON THE
SCREEN, EH?
11