MEDFORP MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. MONDAY, MAY 27. 1940.
PAGE FOTTR
MEDFOROwWTBIBUNS I
RMdi Um Mali Trlfcaae.
Dally a-ieept lialardBf.
Puai'ahM bv
MIDaPoHli fHlNTlNO
IT-SI Nafta Kir Mu paaw ta.
AobBRT W. HUHU Bettor.
UN EAT 8. OILSTMAP. Uanasr.
Aa lR1pAf1tnt Newsjparar.
Batared asxond-aia m-ttar at M4
Card. Oreajaa, iiPrtar Act of Uareb I, IIII
UMCKIPTIOM RATES
Mall ' At-aaee
Dai an Bumiir a year ..,.
tlly and Hjndar ta moat-.. II
Dally an. untr mam ha.
Daily and Sunday ona month... -la
y Carrtarla AJaaca Madford. AaH
and. ,. 1 Pt"- J-k!f!i' n m
Mtiu '(tocue Biter. Paoeala. Talent,
and an motor routee:
Daily and Mund) ona rear . .s I-
Daily aad gndy ona month.. .11
All terir-e raab la advaaea.
OftVtaJ &'per mt toe I lly Mediae
Of! trial Paper at Jakoa County.
MKWHRM OF TUB AhtiOI I A I Kit CHhll
Ureal Inc Pall lona Wire Bri.-e.
The A-eoeiaied f'reae la trluataiy
entitled ta the Ba for publication of all
newe dlipatrhaa ere lied ta It or nhw
wlee oredited ta ihte papar. arid ale ta
tee lacal nwi pubM-hed herein.
All rivbta for publicatloa of epeelal
dlepatche haraia ara aiao rwrd.
MEMBER OP UNITED PHKtfB
MCUBCn 11P AUDIT Bt-KEAU
OP CIRCULATION A
Advertising Reareeentatltee
WKST-HOLLIDAT COMPANY. INC.
Offlcae la Now Ifora. Chicifo. Detroit,
an Franc lac a. Loa Anaelea, Baattia.
rartlaad. (. Lou! a, A llama, Vancouver,
0'MBa6a4i
Ml
nT3
Ye Smudge Pot
By jsKTHl'B PERRY
It if now charged Americans
arc not taking the war seriously
enough. This Is true. As yet,
the price of corner lots in Jack
sonville have not gone up, on ac
count of conditions overseas, ai
in 1014-1018. Neither has any
upstate statesman balked at run
ning for the legislature, until the
European situation clears up, as
one did a quarter of a century
ago. Those were the days of
mighty hysteria. A cabinet offl
cer and pacifist, announced in
11 seriousness, "any invader of
these shores would be conquered
with love." Even now the idea
does not seem feasible. It would
look like le dickens to have a
Necking Division mobilized In
the New England states, tuned
to kin a Nazi, instead of shoot
him, as soon as he landed, via
parachute.
In the HuM of events last
week, "80,000,000 Frenchmen
can't be wrong" less IS "purged"
French generals who failed to
function on the Meuse front and
1 a great help to the foe.
CONSISTENCY OF MAN
(Press Dispatch)
"He has appeared here and
opposed a one-cent a quart In
crease on grounds that It
' would prevent an Increased
consumption of milk among
lower Income groups. Yet he
is executive secretary of a
birth control organization,
which would reduce the con
sumption of milk by reducing
the number of babies who are
Its largest consumers."
"DRESS STYLISHLY OR
NOT AT ALL, EXPERT AD
VISES" (Marysville Appeal
Hdline) Hush up, you Expert!
...
General (Crackdown) Johnson
In his column today, discussing
the New Deal "yes-men," In the
preparedness program hoots at
the idea of Henry Morgenthau
coordinating air defense manu
facturing, and describes the lot.
to-wit: "This anti - industrial
crowd of business incompetents
couldn't be equalled by sifting
the entire nation tor ineptitude
for the task, and their imme
diate reaction Is they don't need
any outside help to do this spec
ialized Job." This appears to be a
complete size-up.
...
A bill before Congress pro
vides for the fingerprinting and
registration of all aliens in the
land, estimated at 4.000.000. It
will take considerable waving of
the whitewash brush by Madam
Perkins, labor secretary, to keep
H. Bridges of Australia out of
this "indignity."
The first presidential candl
date holding a baby, with a
heavyweight wrestler grip, and
the Infant looking as wise as the
candidate, have appeared in t'te
state press.
Vive, ntnau.i run inc.
shooting is guns" (Hdiine i
American Guardian) And. the;
other reason La: No statesmen,
diplomats or politicians pull any
trlbbers.
thanks with a threat
'To my friends who supported
me ao wonderfully in the recent
primary election, my sincere and
heartfelt thanks. The old adage.
"Never say die." may be revived
two yeara from now. when I
again may be a candidate. 1 met
ao many fine people and made
a number of friends. I feel that
In two years I could not do a
arrest deal better.
We republican candidates, who
failed, should aupport the wm
inna, snuiusici 111 mc run i
election and show a united and',rt Montgomery. American mo-
aolll vote to select our licp-ib- tion picture actor, has hern ac
licah nominees." Ort gun City cepted as an ambulance driver
Enterprise.) I for the American field service
Just a Hunch j
WE grant the likelihood
be renominated for a
time and particularly the
iNevenneiess. we sun
that he won't be, and the fireside chat from the White
House last night didn t weaken that persistent, if not
entirely logical, conclusion.
FOR thee was a striking lack of the old Roosevelt
fire and bounce in that address, we thought The
solemnity of the subject and the occasion may have
had something to do with it, but beneath the surface
we felt a rather sad, troubled and weary man, no
longer young, was speaking.
And obviously if this is to be a war-torn world,
and it looks that way, a
mind, body and spirit should not be at the national
helm for FOUR MORE years. Not only would he be
instinctively averse to it, but the people would not
want it
SO we still believe someone whose initials are not
V T" P urill ho the nomncratiV nnminoo fnr 1 Q4fl
However, if all the political form sheets are right, and
Mr. Roosevelt IS the nominee after all, we proceed
to crawl even further out on the limb, and predict his
defeat
No, we aren't going to argue the matter. On the
basis of logic and the present probabilitiqs, we grant
we would be knocked into a cocked hat before we
could get a decent start In fact, if the grapevine is
correct, they are wagering, in the future book on Wall
Street, 3 to 1 now that the 32nd President of the
United States will be on the job until 1944.
Nevertheless, that is our hunch and we are going
to stick to it All we ask is no one forget that is what
we called it, just that and nothing else, not con
sidered judgment, or patiently matured opinion, but
just a HUNCH 1
F.D.R. on the Defensive
THERE was another unusual feature about that fire
CI A -a l Q f rVlA VTrt01 "I rt-N f AAAitrtinr) ay. Onr-t Vie nnt
DUC VllCtVa 11 1G 1 ICDIUCIIb JVV.UJ-UCU tX PUt J1C OCl"
dom occupies and doesn't like, that of the defensive
strategist Like Weygand and Petain, Franklin D.
Roosevelt greatly prefers to attack, in fact like
them, that is his great forte.
BUT, as the matter of war preparedness promises
f K on ImnApfnnf l.aiiA !m .Vim f 1 1 .' . t
an uuui Mini, imuc
President had to take some
lican attacks in tnat vulnerable direction, particu
larly the bitter and vindictive ones from the vitriolic
pen of General Hugh "Iron Pants" Johnson.
So he devoted a considerable portion of his speech
defending his preparedness program, and denying
that the millions appropriated for this purpose had
been diverted to "boon doggling" or poured down
a rat hole, as has been charged.
AND as figures don't lie
crnnA ftoca
The U. S. navy undoubtedly is stronger today than
it has ever been in PEACE TIME before, the U. S.
army also.
This does not mean either arm of national defense 1
is NOW ready for service in the European conflict, i
Nor does it mean the United States is as well prepared j
today, as all well-informed people wish it were, or '
as it would be if our FOREsight seven years ago had
been as keen as our HINDsight is today. i
DUT it DOES mean the present administration has
" done a great deal more in this direction than it '
ever promises to get credit for, and infinitely more !
than would have been the case had Republicans of ;
me uewey or governor stassen (this year s GOP
key noter) type, been in the White House.
For both these distinguished gentlemen have re
peatedly stated that what happens or doesn't happen
in Europe is none of this country's concern, and if it
isn't, obviously there is no occasion to prepare for
trouble from that quarter now, nor has there been
any for seven years past
In all fairness, in fact, it must be admitted that
this, in general, has represented the Republican
party's viewpoint regarding the Roosevelt foreign
policy until Herr Hitler's latest Blitzkrieg knocked it
into the middle of next week.
UOWEVER, what is just and fair, from an abstract
viewpoint, has little to do with what is said or
done in practical politics, and President Roosevelt
therefore was no doubt wise to start building: up a de
fense against his preparedness program, which in all
likelihood will be the weakest point in the Democratic
party's armor when the presidential campaign really
starts
vj i . . ,
hut, as aoove stated,
the President is far from
the defensive, in fact, he is then at his worst.
Which accounted, in part perhaps, for the stromr
impression made upon this department by last nights
chat that President Roosevelt today is no longer the
' I"! 1 nttlf 0-rtw,' eAHAAM ....I 4 U .. .' 1 1 ' . 1 .il I
"Happy Warrior" eager
is a rather tired and sobered veteran who odX--
m fiiuy preicr 10 lei younger
me snip or state through the turbulent and tempestu
ous seas that now confront it!
R08T. MONTGOMERY TO
BE AMBULANCE DRIVER
l Londoi M.v J7 .pRob.
President Roosevelt will
third term increases as I
war goes on.
noiu io our miKinai view
man in that condition of
111 uic IdJl CcMllJJcllIl, Ulc
cognizance of the Repub
the President made out a
necessary as such action is,
his bpst vbfn Jin Vina tn taLo
and thrillinc for battle, biitif"' some resentment at m. poor
and stronger hands guide 1
f"d,'xpw, ' ':v ,or Fr"nre
n f-iiiraa or 1 nun-nay.
MontRomfry hm bern com
paratively Inactive pi no hit artaxtr r Aunru-an atptnan aa an
rival In England In January and' arm- mm. 10 find that tn cvrmany
hni been awaiting an opportun-! unif orm ma you a aort of dmi
ity for active war service. . Certainly h formrt intimate
I fMfmWilp wiili m.n of 'he rhV
Oaa Mall Trtbuaa waat ad. ' 0rT..an military nva, and with on
Personal Health Service
Bt WUUasa
flint Wtm pwulnlDf ta parsons! health and h. stent, sot t aiseaM
etsinous or Iraatmrat, IU Da answered b; Or. Brsdr II a stamped arlr
adtrtaaed antalapa la tncloatd. Utters sbsald ha brief and written In Ink.
Omtni to tba larte numbers of letters recalled only a fa oaa bo ansseraa.
No reple ran be made to ananas not eonforralns to Instructions. Address
Dr. nillUm Bradjr, MS gl Camlao, Baaerlj Hills. Cailf.
NUTRITION AND
At seventy-one, writes F. H.
A., I suppose it is to be expected
that one should have a painful
lrrfJL$ i joint here and I
tnere.
Well, now
friend A I wish
you would not
try to make a
p e s si m 1st of
me. Let me tell
you 1 shall be
sadly disap
pointed with
my whole
scheme of life
if. at seventy-
one, I regard
Joint disability or discomfort as
a natural manifestation of my
age.
You see. It all depends. It de
pends chiefly on the state of
one's nutrition. Nutrition is the
sum of the processes by which
a plant or animal absorbs or
takes in and utilizes food sub
stances. Good nutrition beflins
at your teeth. And right there
is where so many poor geuks
part with their prospect of en
joying good health in later life
They neglect their teeth; they
delude themselves that brushing
with this or that Is care of the
teeth; they attempt to dodge reg
ular visits to the dentist, either
out of fear. Ignorance or false
economy.
Every tooth lost by disease,
accident or design subtracts a
year or two from the individual's
life expectation unless and I
say this with great conviction
that I am right unless its func
tion is carried on by a suitable
denture nromptly installed in
the mouth.
We can go no farther than
the teeth in today's little lesson
in nutrition, friend A., but that
is enough to give you a faint
idea of the importance of the
state of nutrition in regard to
the prevention and treatment
of chronic joint disability. For
the rest of the interview I shall
try to be practical.
If I were seventy-one and had
a painful Joint here and there
or a touch of rhemnatiz In the
fingers, I'd endeavor to follow
a high calcium diet and besides
I'd take an additional ration of
medicinal calcium daily. I'd take
at least 50, 0OB units of vitamin
D daily this may be taken
either in a teaspoonful of oil or
in a small capsule which con
tains 50.000 units. I'd see to It
that I got my daily drop of io
dine. And I'd make it a rule to
cat four ounces of fresh wheat
germ every day, in one form or
another. If. for any reason, I
could not have wheat germ
THE
CAPITAL
PARADE
By JOSEPH ALSOP and
ROBERT KINTNEP
Released by the North
American Newspaper
Alliance. Inc.
Washington, May 27. There
are a few important Americans,
even one or two in high posi
tions Irr the goveniment. who
have something very like a
sneaking admiration for the nazi
movement. Take, for example.
Col. Truman Smith, an influen
tial member of the army intelli
gence staff, with whom Col.
Charles A. Lindbergh
U re -
ported to have talked berore
his recent remarkable speech.
Col Smith tends to speak with
scorn of the softness of democratic
llberali.'m. haa lonx
regarded the
next military machine aa the maater
work It la now tragically proven to
be. and I notably allent on the aub-
ject ot tne sy.m """!
me masierwora.
The peculiar Lindbergh attitude
toward the onward march of the
men of mud and blood seema to
be about the esme aa the Smith
attitude. The two men are old
friends, and aa military attache In
pernn. smnn naa a pan in
during Undrwruh to tha tchntcai
t-hivmn?a. aa wU aa to aofnt
at tha iadfr of tha nasi rtrim.
Umlth la. of court, an t
to jpiajn H -a 10 th aama
rla. at Ytl with aurh mn
ArvMbaid Ma.-LeUh and John W.
Hanfft, rui w!vr thT rrturntd to
pmt ltfp afttr th? ttrM world mar,
ftmlth ronumird In tha rmy. Aa
. t , ..-ei, e-assa ha nci rlAi 1 P1 1
Tlien he went to Berlin aa a mill-
tezv attache Peiive a military Intel
lectual and eomc'hlns of a fantatlc
about h's prweseton. he probably
fe:t evn more than the usual army
officers rnMeaelonsl ertro'retlon for
the Germane aa war-makera.
Pro!-atv.v tt waa pleasant to him.
Brady. M. D.
THE RHEUMATIZ
daily I'd substitute one vitamin
B complex tablet or capsule for
each ounce of wheat germ I
might be short of the daily ra
tion
Of course I'd have a great ad
vantage over the average person
of my age, for I have been tak
ing good care of my teeth. Ye;,
and I have been practicing Belly
Breathing for many years, too.
In fact, I have been taking a lot
of my own medicine, and I feel
downright sorry for most people
of my age when they get
started on their Infirmities. The
trouble is, you can't tell 'em
.. ihM, Miffht in Irnnw be-
cause they know so many things I
about health
ain't so.
and illness that ,
qresTiose. and answers
Wheat Folloaa Liter
On your eusjreetion Z tried to buy
plain wheat or wheat germ. Orocer
waa rague. but aald he would try
to get It from the mill where he
seta flour. Later he had wheat germ
In S-pound meals bags, at als centa
a pound. Still later a new aupply
In air-tight, Termtn-proof bags, but
at 10 cents a pound. The other day
I found atin a new aupply In the
store, this time two pounds for 40
cents In a scaled carton ... IT. E. J.I
Answers-Only yesterday the germ
was discarded aa worthleaa. or m
only for animal feeding. Aa soon
aa the doctors began prescribing It
the price of wheat germ began to
soar. It waa the same with ller
butchers used to give It away. Doc
tor began to prescribe it. Liver Im
mediately acquired fahtiloua value.
Perhapa If you would atop and visit
a mill when you coma across one
In your ramblea you may find a
miller who will tell you wheat germ
at a reasonable price.
Well Brought t'p
I waa practically raised on your
Instructions. My mother still awears
by Dr. Brady. We are expecting our
Hrat bahy in September. Am I aup
poeed to do anything about my
health, which Is nnet (Mra. W. H i
Answer Just keep up your reg
ular dally work, piay and other actlv
Itlea. fiend 10 centa for "Preparing
for Maternity;" I-oent atamp on eelf
addreased envelope will suffice.
Beard
Can the hair of a man's
beard
be permanently removed by electro-
lysis aa for hall on a woman's face?
Have heard it can and want to know
whether It la safe. (A. K. P.)
Answer If you mesn the whole
beard. It la ecarrely practicable.
Electrolysla la the beat method of
treating auperfluous hair, but many
who attempt it are not qualified
or reliable.
(Protected by John P. Dllle Co.)
Cd. Note: reraont wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct la nr.
William Brady, M. D.. tas El
Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif.
or two nar leaders of the type of
Hermann Ooerlng. Hla knowledge of
the German army la ao great that
he haa been kept on In the mili
tary Intelligence ahnmigh he la not
well.
In truth Smith, abhorrent though
some of hla oplnlona may seem. Is
not the sort of man to worry about
Aa yet we In America need not even
greatly worry about such special
cases aa the nasi bund-members,
their communist fellow-travelers,
and the professed nasi amenta like
the Boston and San Pranctaco con-
auls. Dr. Herbert Schola and Captain
Prlta Weldemann. They can be dealt
with, very firmly but very calmly.
The men we in America must fear,
at thla terrible crisis in our history,
are the fat-faced, complacent, stupid
and Interested men whose moronic
passivity may prevent the country
from acting aa boldly and quickly
aa this crlala demanda.
Some of them are petty partisans,
terrified that the tension of a time
of deadly danger will give political
advantage to the prealdent they hare
Some ar wooly-headed optlmlstawho
1 cannot b&r to i
th drawl world
, m wnicn iney live snaitcreo oy ine
brutal and bloody reality. But most
j are Juat short -sighted men. w ho
mouth the same old nonsense that
'" ano ana r..n. .
ana prouaiy can it realism.
.
One of them wu lr. the c. her
!, richly at s rich mane hotel
, complaining rurtoualT of the govern-
j mfM wnrn . nlra
M n( pp.,,,,,, N, Vork h(Mllt
j ( , 1M- proD,m, or
H w on, , tnM, wnom
,h fMrT Ch,r, rrn(. Muri, WM
lnlnu wn,n , Mld ,h, bu.
nwuT1,n h d,,ilk m ,hct, die.
tlniruifchi only by " certa'n low
runntnf '
And ha wtm ta?utTf all and fundrr
what oucht to ha dona about tha
naj mnar-firing hla Important
opinion, marhap. at tha Try mo
ment whn tha Ofrman bomhr.
Chan & Chan
Chlnra Madirlna Co
He rrlle.fd at onra n
out her hat rmrdv. On
-on have; t h m a
Ha Itt, stoma-
rrouMt. 'tntUwttnW
1 iif.inic . 011th, KhfnmatUm, Si
nn IrotiMe, eirea, UrthMtla, rv
Hilt, ?? ma. appandtrttta. Hit
fttorvi rvrMure. Pt-oatate. Hrarf
I iter. Bladder, ftldpe. L antra.
Blood, ttinary tmahlea. Herb,
alll lt Tern relief. SU &. Main
NOW OPEN DAILY
rxrrpT rn.T
ta a. m. to B?M p. m.
r . .V
1 a-rv
flrtxtf vine to wing, ware eroaalBff
and re-crossing a square mile of
the moat populoua quarter of Rot
terdam, reducing the work of cen
turlea of eimisatlon to broken
aharda and smoking ruins, and mur
dering 100.000 Innocent, unarmed
men arid women who had made
peaca already.
But this kind of thing, and the
elmple method of snaa murder by
which th oermane have "digested"
their Polish and Ceecho-Alorallan
conqueata, bad apparently not been
brought to our bankere attention.
It would, he aald. of course take
Hitler many yeera "to digeat" alt of
Europe.
T.- .Id. r.. uMiiei, be "no
danger to ua ao long aa we kept
our (.el on the ground." We could,
bo amsstested. make a "sensible
peace" with Hitler, for after all
there would be no use "In flying
In the face of reality."
The budget, he pointed out, could
not stand the atraln of great arma
ment expenditures, and In any caae.
"we were in no dancer." And ao.
he urged, let ua be calm, make
deal with the conqueror, and "keep
our noeea out of other people's bual.
neae." That la the sort of talk of
which the price may be the utter,
'J "'"ruction the
"OT"r' lmaa' our "
AT THE
National Capitol
WITH
John W. Kelly
CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONI
which were organized by communists
and are. or were, dominated by the
reds, aa atteated by Browder In books
he has published.
Should the LaPollette bill become
a law. these brlgadea of reda and
tnetr fellow travelers, can penetrate
Into any Industry filling national de
fense orders. It la known that mem
bers of the ,:fifth coiumn" ore em
ploved in the aircraft factortea on ;he
coaat. It Is a matter of record that
one tampered with a plana being
made for the government; that the
sabotage agent, when discharged, had
to be re-employed by the factory on
ciders of NLRB.
CERTAIN senators aupportlng the
LaPollette measure are partly re
sponsible for the regulation prohibit
ing PBI from wire-tapping, although
topping wlrea or euspecta and known
spies la a recognised practice. Now a
fureljrn agent can telephone hla au
perlor with the knowledge that hit
verbal report will not be overheard
The LnPollette measure Invests the
enemies within with civil liberties
I not accorded them under any other
! "ag. It la the theory of civil liberties
tbat la stretched to protect enemies
from having their wlree tapped by
the O-Men.
o
NR third of the senators are up
among them are candldatea who,
wnlle recognising the b4 featurea of
the LnFollette meaaure. are afraid to
offend labor in a campaign. Hearings
of the civil Ubertlea committee dis
closed that many of the wttneasea
were reda; thla connection being un-cevc-ed
by the Dlea committee.
Leader Berkley waa so determined
to carry out the administration's
wish to kill the Logan-wafer bill
that hla foot slipped. And 'from na
tional defense etandpomt. the LaPol
lette bill la worse.
JAME8 Alger Pee. Judge of the fed
eral district court for Oregon, gave
Attorney Oeneral Robert Jackson
; something to think about. Judge Pee
la a reserve officer and thought he
would like to get away from the
bench to attend the maneuvers. The
attorney general had no objection.
There la a rule In the department
cf justice covering the matter: all
a Judge haa to do to participate In
military actlvltlee la to resign. It is
"
n.Q "' c'
Nary asked Jackson to give the mat
ter his personal consideration, in
view of the program for training offi
cers recommended by the president,
"he attorney general screed to take
the matter under advisement.
APPROXIMATELY 88 cltlea In the
west mainly dependent for their
aater supply on watersheds wltnln
1 be
the national foresta will now be bet-
to protect their aupply.
MtNary'i bill autnonrts the fcrttj-lt-a
of a crl culture and Interior to mt
nnM nch watrhMls and rwrve
,Vnl ntm , ,orm, of lectio,,,
,,ntrT or sprroprtatlon. excluding aU
p,rson' trim the watershed eacepl
forf officials and representatives of
tn, municipality Interested.
Hunting, ramping and fishing can
be barred under the regulatlona of
,nf or.url. T ,,,. ,n.rM
a few dava ago, ta the result of a
conference of officiate in Portland
from all cltlea with the problem of
piotectlng their water supply.
BANKRUPTCY
NOW
Lee's
25
O. W.
In The i j
VSSOLINI. at noon Friday.
still on the fence but
ii.i on
to be teetering toward
i v.,,f
appears
the German aide,
UNOFFICIAL observers" say
the French have secretly
offered Italy special rights in
Asia, credit facilities through
the Suez canal and a free port
at Jiboutl (as an outlet for
snatched Abyssinia). Britain has
been suggesting lifting the al
lied blockade in the Mediterran
ean for Italy's benefit,
Mussolini snaps back (it is re-;
ported) that these concessions j
too utile aim iw i
HERE'S a thought for those
among us (including Jittery
stock market speculators) who
insist that the allies ar. done
for and the end only a matter
of days;
If Britain and France were
in as desperate a situation as
the pessimists claim, would they
stop in their efforts to buy off
IUly with piffling offers of
special rights in Asia, special
facilities through the Suez
canal, a free port for Italian
grabbed Abyssinia and a lifting
of the blockade in the Mediter
ranean? Hardlyl
T this point, let's do a little
realistic thinking.
Suppose bandita were attack
ing your neighbor, whose farm
you COVET. Suppose you wav
ered and hesitated and teetered
on the fence while you bludg
eoned your hard-pressed neigh
bor to give you half his farm
in return for helping him de
fend it and at the same time
propositioned the bandits for a
60-40 split of the loot if you
helped them.
By every standard of private
morality you would be a cad.
a sneak, a double-crosser, a per
son not fit for decent people
to associate with.
That is exactly what Musso
lini is doing.
DUT don't forget this:
" You would be judged by
standards of private morality.
Mussolini is judged by the
standards of European Interna
tional morality.
According to these standards,
Mussolini is pure. He is doing
only what any European nation
would do if in his place. He
is playing the game according
to the rules.
The British and the French
empires have been built in this
manner. All empires throughout
history have been built in this
manner.
It is in this way that the
game of empire is played.
VET there are Americans who
profess to believe that their
country should plunge into the
double-dealing, double-crossing,
hijacking game of world em
pire! All war veterans as well as
the public are invited to hear
II. Elwyn Davis, national vice
commander of the American Le
gion, who speaks at the Armory
Tuesday at 8 p. m.
American Legion pots par
ticipating in the meeting will be
Kerby. Grants Pass. Ashland
Merrill. Malin. Klamath Falls
Lekeview ani Medford.
Mr. Davis served with the
349th A m b u I a n r e companv.
313th Sanitary Train, and saw
active service in the Alsace sec
tor during the World war.
Closing time fat Too Late to Clas
sify Ada is 130 p. m.
Cs Mall Tribune want ads
ENTIRE STOCK OF
Menu's Unjp
amid 50 oftff
KELLINGTON. Trustee In Bankruptcy
Flight (T Time
Med ford and iackesa Cooaty
Uutorf from the fllea of the
Hall Tribune It and 3d lears
ajo.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
May 27. 1930
(It was Tuesday)
George W. Joseph. Republi
can nominee for governor, and
Thomas Mannix, Portland attor
ney permanently barred irom
ie.ti law in state.
I0110W.
Ui.k on the
gut. supreme court were
,. '
mal-
Sportsmen association to
fight plans for power dams in
Rogue river.
Lincoln grade school cops
track meet honors.
Luther Deuel buys the Paul
Scherer orchard in the Centrat
Point district.
Don Clark defeats Roy Mc-
Daniels in second flight of Or-
gon gtate golf meet at Eugene.
.
Predict fruit snipping season
will start August 7, a week
earlier than last year.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
May 27, 1920
(It was Thursday)
President Wilson vetoes the
Knox peace resolution as "a
stain upon the honor of Amer
ica," and a desire to keep out
of European affairs.
Senate votes down an Ameri
can mandate over Armenia.
No Republican candidate has
an advantage with the national
convention to open in Chicago
early in June.
' Miss Dorothy Gilbert and
Earl Tumy were married in
Portland today. They will make
their home in this city.
Trigonia oil company issues a
statement and reports progress.
CHICAGO MILK STRIKE
ENDED AFTER 8 DAYS
Chicago. May 27. '.-Pi Chi
cago's eight-day-old milk strike
the second this month was
ended last night and delivery
to homes was resumed today ai
tank trucks brought in thous
ands of gallons of milk to re-
i plenish a depleted supply.
The strike which cost farm
ers and strikers thousands of
dollars, was marked by dally
outbreaks of violence. Trucks
were dumped, drivers beaten
and milk store windows.broken.
Closing time for loo Late to Clas
sify Ada la 1:30 p. m.
Da Mall Tribune want ad.
a Oar gvsiti sever sssis re weaear st rae
way we strive te glasse. Yaw wsy Is sw
wsv. The Chef ceeas it fee vee. eM
Hiverse' seues, aitK.la yeas
MMeta ttsski see eassts, fwmeif, fresh,
est vsitraUe. If vee with, aetialtit at
M st ae '! Yee'll live see fsirl
Me s lieg st M. Imeirltl e keeuvelf
. . ieit s kleck e rw from fas teeter
e rtiiep . . . . ireen, seeks, tkearfee.
Wrtara YOV rfvt likf tff
.. but tht to h lowi
SALE