Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 18, 1940, Page 6, Image 6

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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON. SUNDAY. AUGUST 18. 1940.
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I.TIM
Ye Smudge Pot
By Art bar Perry.
Onlv 118 dayi till the only
Fri. the 13th of thli year.
Peoria Bill Gates U getting
readv for his annual invasion of
the Mid-West early in Sept.
Vern (Shotgun) Canon, the In
defatigable young Democrat, an
nounces if Willkie is elected he
will never laugh again, any
louder than Con DeVore, the
cow surgeon.
The days are favorable for
the Hob Deuel ice business, and
when the taxpayers wake up in
the middle of the night, it s cold
enough to remind him he will
have to see Hobias about a wood
pile soon.
John Anderson of C. Pt. has
sold his ranch, and plans to do
some gadding.
Deke Buckingham was 80
years old Tues., causing the
Salem Capital-Journal to remark
playfully: "Deke used to be
candy maker hereabouts, past
exalted ruler of the Elks and
otherwise a No. 1 citizen. His
mind softened about 20 years
ago and he moved to Medford."
Deke retorts he don't know what
made him stay so long in Salem
the first time, and it he ever
goes again, it will be with the
sheriff.
School opens Sept. 9, and the
kids will soon be getting pre
school haircuts.
t
J. Wesley Bates, the chin-
whacker, reports his radio has
wore him out. The radio says if
J. Wesley had hung on another
ten minutes, he would have won.
A little girl living on Peach
street received a cat Frl. that
came all the way from Nebraska
by express, and both were glad
to see each other.
...
Coaches of Old Oregon were
here Tues. and shut their eyes
when a bevy of 190 pd. athletes
came up to shake hands.
...
Three councllmen were caught
at the wrestling matches last
Alon. night.
Picking and packing of the
Bartletts is keeping pickers and
packers on the well-known Jump
more so than usual.
The British announce they
have a secret weapon more dan-
gerous than a Model A hauling
a row-boat behind, either direc
tion on a mountain road.
J. W. Dressier of Los A., a
former real estatist and alder
man here is visiting here.
One of the Rockefeller hoys
has gone to work for Uncle Sam
for $1 per year. If pinched, he
can fall back on something be
sides his pay.
The Canadian thistles In the
Lake Creek country are a record-breaking
crop litis year.
Klamath Falls is stewing over
parking meters. The country
folks will probably kick about
dropping a nickel in a hitching
post, when they come to town.
Miscue
Portland, Aug. n. (.71 Near
ly 99 tons of canned goods were
dumped Into the Willamette
river near Terminal 4 yesterday
by a barbe that listed sharply
as it was being pushed.
Parachutes Found
London, Aug. 17. HVy Fif
teen parachutes believed to have
been released from a German
plane were picked up today in
the northeast coastal area. Thrre
was no evidence that they had
been manned.
Mr. Willkie Accepts
THE outstanding characteristics of Wendell Will
tria'p inonnlinM ansspVi u-pre ifcn simnliritv. its
ni o uvLk.ui.vv - - - - - - - j i
candor and its refreshing originality.
If anyone doubted the nonpartisan and nonpoliti
cal character of the Republican candidate, this non
declamatory and politically unorthodox address
must have removed it.
As the "Gentleman from Indiana" remarked some
weeks ago, when it comes to speeches "he rolls his
own."
None of the time-honored cliches, and pompous
generalities of the usual acceptance speech in this
one. None of the moss-covered traditions of the grand
"old army game," the first commandment of which is :
"If you can't view the opposition with alarm, don't
view it at all!"
MR. WILLKIE not only expressed his respect for
the President of the United States, his acknowl
edgement that the difficulties surrounding the posi
tion in the present critical state of the world are
many; but he went out of his way to uphold the Presi
dent where he believes him right, i.e., the principle
of the selective draft; giving aid to the defenders of
democracy against totalitarian aggression in Europe,
extending assistance short of war to Great Britain,
while a long list of the social and economic aims of
the New Deal were frankly approved by this extraor
dinary G. 0. P. nominee.
We are quite sure if former Senator Jim Watson
of Indiana attended his fellow statesman's "coming
out" party, the Old Guard veteran had some ex
tremely uncomfortable moments, as he listened to
what he could only regard as the rankest political
heresy.
DUT that's Wendell Willkie. He says what he be
lieves and believes what he says. Where the New
Deal administration is right he commends it. Where
it is wrong he condemns it. He accepts ready-made
and vote-catching policies or phrases from no one.
He thinks things out for himself, he goes straight to
the point, he "rolls his own."
TTHE speech certainly was not what could be called
an eloquent one. Nor a great one, but it did, in
the judgment of this department, reveal an ex
tremely honest, fearless and intensely sincere man,
genuinely consecrated to what he regards as a sacred
task, the return of this country to fundamental
democratic principles, and the unity of this country,
and the continued progress and prosperity of this
country upon the foundation of those principles.
UERE was no narrow partisan opposition to the
Roosevelt administration, but an opposition based
on principle.
Whatever the Democratic party may think of
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, here was
plainly a TRUE Democrat, who opposes not the aims,
but the methods and spirit of the President and his
program, and definitely and clearly shows precisely
why he is in vigorous and uncompromising opposition.
IN this portion of the address, in fact, it seemed to
us, the speaker rose to true greatness, as he did in
the closing portions where, with impressive earnest
ness, he kicked every tradition of the orthodox party
acceptance speech in the face, and instead singing
the old partisan refrain of "vote for me and happy
days are here again," he told his auditors the cold,
hard truth :
"Before us there Is no easy road. It Is a road of hard
ship, of sacrifice, of service, a road where we need be
hard of muscle, clear of head, brave of heart, a hard
working and a UNITED people!"
Yes, any candidate for the presidency who could
sound a note like that in a routine acceptance speech,
has a quality of true greatness about him.
It would be so much easier, and cheaper, just
to "view with pride, point with alarm," ignore the
fact that the democracies of the world are in peril
as never before, that this country faces not only de
structive forces from without, but from within, and
that the task of maintaining peace with the world in
flames, and restoring prosperity with a tax load that
is literally back-breaking, is truly herculean in its
proportions,
Yes. that would have been the easy way, but
Wendell Willkie refused to take the easy way, and
we repeat, thereby proved his greatness, his courage
and his integrity.
THE big popular hit of the speech, of course, was
1 the challenge to the President for a country-wide
debate upon the outstanding issues of the campaign.
This was the fighting, partisan note the crowd had
been waiting for and the first real, whole-hearted
enthusiasm of the day burst out in all its glory.
W!
ELL, why not? Abraham Lincoln had time to
debate with Senator
President, who asks that he be granted what no other
American President has ever been granted, a third
term, have time to debate with the opposition can
didate?
This would be in accord with the democratic tra
dition, and we can think of no better way in which to
clarify the complicated issues which confront this
country in one of the most critical periods in its
history.
Nevertheless, this department is going to be
greatly surprised if this challenge is accepted. Mrs.
Roosevelt wouldn't miss such an opportunity, but we
think it about a hundred to one wager Franklin
Delano Roosevelt will !
THE real kernel of the speech, however, was not
contained in this challenge, but in that pledge that
Douglas, whv shouldn't the
if he is elected President, the war upon legitimate and
honest business will cease, the arraying of class
against class will end, and in the soundest tradition
of genuine democracy, all classes, all races, all types
will be persuaded to join together in united action to
establish that material well-being and spiritual
ascendancy which will make the "American way of
life" not only secure, but the hope and the salvation
of the civilized world!
Personal Health Service
By WillUm
totters pertaining to personal health antf B'gleiM. not to tflieaaa
dlagnoele ar treatment, mill b a nana red Dr. Brady If m atampad eell
sddreaaed envelop la enclosed. Letter a ahoold ba brief and written la Ink.
Owing ta the large numbers of letters received only a few can ba anawered.
So reply can ba made to queries not conforming to Instructions, address
Dr. William Brady, M5 CI Cam I no. Bererly Kills. Calif.
WHAT DID !
Every summer at the height
of tha vacation season a flock
of Inquiries from readers turn
up, most of them from individ
uals who want
to lose a trifle
of twenty or
thirty pounds
of slacker
flesh any time
between now
and Sunday
aft ernoon
no hurry
about It, take
our time, but
be sure to at
tend to the
matter when
we get around
to It. Perhaps ten per cent of
these vacation time requests
come from individuals who are
on the skinny side and while
they are packing for the trip
to the country it occurs to them
that it might brighten the at
tractions of the resort if they
put on say ten or fifteen pounds
flesh while waiting for the
train, so to speak.
These are commendable aspir
ations, my dear children, and if
it were possible to work the
miracles by means of a pleas
ant letter or an encouraging pat
on the back 01' Doc Brady
would even be late for the first
game of bowls of an afternoon
in order to comply with your re
quest. But life is real, life is
earnest, and again I ray that
ideally the time to reduce Is
generally five years before you
have to "go on a diet". In other
words, it is a great deal easier
and more satisfactory in every
respect to keep ten per cent su
perfluous flesh off than it is to
get it off after you have toted
it around for some time.
Mind, I do not bar such re
quests. Indeed I answer them
as promptly as possible regard
less of consequences. But Just
between ourselves I hope you
will understand clearly that any
regimen or any change In your
way of living that you may
adopt now, at my suggestion,
will bring the Implied result, If
at all, only after some months
of application. Certainly I have
never given you the slightest
hint that I can impart a magic
secret method of "slenderizing"
while you sleep. Life is real, life
Portland, Ore., Aug. 17. An
other stop in the new deal pol
icy of running private industry
out of business is disclosed in
the announcement that the Re
construction Finance Corpora
tion will furnish funds with
which 13 PUDs in Washington
state can purchase the proper
ties of the Puget Sound Power
& Light Company, which had
operating revenue of $14.61
693 in 1939.
Official announcement b y
RFC in confirmation of the
statement made by this column
many months ago that the gov
ernment was preparing to sup
ply taxpayer money to PUDs to
finance acquisition of utilities
and thereby dispense with
PUDs paying a commission to
sell revenue securities and raise
money by this method. If the
Washington program is culmin
ated similar financial aid can
be expected for PUDs in Ore
gon. RFC has a long sack.
When and if thts loan is
made, the government will have
as security a mortgage on the
property and may, eventually,
have to foreclose, install a re
ceiver and operate the system in
19 counties which are within a
radius of 150 miles of Seattle,
and which also includes Seattle.
RfC tata that it La willing to
couaidrr an application for a loan,
provldfd U la approwl by Bonna
villa admtnltirauun, aiao an tncy
of tha pernment. In this inaianc
"conaldrrmtlon" can ba lntarprtd
aa apprmad."' for an aarliar appli
cation at on tha rrry of approral
whn tha corporation rwflvM nottor
that inn- ttrtf r'iinwt
thro-ui pttt f TV initial
application and tha lUtnina of
Brady. M. D.
TELL YOUT
Is earnest. You can't have your
cake and eat it too.
Ditto to the skinnies. Frank
ly, tho, tha skinny ones are
more reasonable or sensible
about it, as a rule. They are de
lighted and grateful if they can
put on a bare five or ten
pounds weight or, more to the
point, an inch or two of circum
ference. They are happy to
achieve this in the course of sev
eral months of endeavor. Where
as your average overnourished,
underworked individual train
ing for obesity scarcely bothers
to report a loss of only five or
ten pounds or a mere Inch or
two in girth.
qi ESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Monotrapht on Health
Pleas. Inform u what pamphlet
or monograph, on health and hygiene
you hava available for. reader. We
have teen several of your monographs
and we consider them Invaluable to
keep on file for reference when occa
sion arlaea. (8. A. U. Librarian I.
Answer The following are avail
able. Tot any one, send stamped Sc
envelope bearing your address. If
you ask for more than one. Inclose
10c for each three you want of
course together with tamped Sc and
addressed envelope.
Relief for Allergy: The Calcium
Shortage: Hay Fever. Asthma: Re
serve Power: Quinine in Modem
Medicine; Tlnnttua and Deafness:
Prostatic Obstruction: Bed Wetting:
todln Ration: Ivy FoUonlng: Home
Sanitation: Tobacco Habit: Belly
Breathing: Foot Itch: Why Have
Headache?: stuttering: Nail Biting
and Thumb Sucking: Psoriasis: Ecae
ma: Acne (Blackbeada and Plmplee):
Car. of Hair and Control of Dand
ruff; Hygiene for Otrls: Leucorrhea:
Tumor and Displacement; Meno
pause: How to Oaln Weight: Pocket
Emergency Kit: Arthritis; Varlcoee
Velna and Ulcers; Hernia; Pruritus:
Styes: Bolls; Hives, Sucking.
Rlupld to Have Piles
For heaven'a sake If you can sug
gest a remedy for piles do so. I am
almost an Invalid from the suffering.
(Mrs. R. T. L
Answer Send a atamped envelope
bearing your address and I'll glv. you
the name of a physician skilled In
ambulant treatment. It Is pslnless
snd efficacious. Stupid to suffer
with such trouble today.
(Protected by John F. Dili. Co.)
Cd. Not.. Persons wishing t.
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D tSS El
Camlno. Beverly Hills Calif.
RFC to maka a loan forecast a policy
which can ba pursued in rrp part
of the country where public utility
! district li organised.
Two dlstrlcta In in-egon and four
In Washington along the Columbia
river submitted to Administrator
Raver a proposal that RFC finance
them aa a combination and Raver
laid the matter before offlclaJa In
the national capital aftr which
nothing developed. Howerer, the
Puget 0ound Pomer A Light Co.
deal haa White House connections,
and a nod from the chief executive
to nta appointee on RFC is potent.
tt la not Improbable that Puget
Sound Power A Light may be merged
with Seat tie "a municipal adventure
In the power buslneaa. otherwise
government financed utility dlstrlcta
would be competing with the mu
nicipal plant,
RFC ta tha lending agency of the
government. It makes loan to China
to purchase munitions to use) aglnst
the Japaneae invaders: It haa made
loan to the Scandinavian countries;
to Beveral South American countries,
and the president wanta RFC to atd
the Export-Import bank to make
loans for hundreds of millions to
other Latin-American countries un
der the good neighbor policy,
a
THOMAS O RAH AM CORCORAN
(Tommy the Cork, White Houae
Jester, was so occupied In entertain
ing the 1.300 guest at Bohemian
Orore that he neglected his ml Ml on
to that annual fun-feat, which wae
to talk Louis Johnson tnto returning
to the national capital and not walk
out on Mr. Rooeerelt during the
campaign. Johnson we kicked out
aa assistant secretary of war b?
Henry L. Stlmaon. Republican secre
tary of that department. Miffed.
Johnson flew to California, with
Tommy taking the next plane.
Johnson la almost the onlv In
stance where a higher up official
ha been urged to stick with the
administration after being ousted
and haa been offered a job "just
a good '
Once In the heart of the red wood a.
Tommy was furnished with aa ac
cordion and he played In the various
camps until the guest iSO percent
being Republican and probably M
percent suffering from legislation the
Cork drafted with Benny Cohan and
lobbied through congress) forgot
Johnson and even Herbert Hoover.
j for the Cork la an entertainer who
would make good with a musical
I and tingle act In vaudeville. He
1 made a biggr hit than Charley
1 Mcc::hv and P-lgr Bergn. or een
Bergna other dummy, Ophelia, the
old maid. Tonus topped Jobs
Cbarlea Thorn, th only man who
ha transposed The Star Spangled
Banner" to a key enabling anyone
to sing tho national anthem.
Between a lection oa the atomach
Sieinway, Corcoran confided that
January 1 ha and Benny will pull
up aiakee In th national capital
and open law office in Hew York
whether tha November election 1
win. lose or draw for th new deal.
Th Cork la smart: Bohemian Orove
wa full of prospective client for
a Wail Street lawyer and a little
advertising helps bring buslneaa.
Unlike Raymond Moley, Corcoran
will not writ bis memoirs of the
new deal until th principal char
acters bev paased into the beyond
Tommy la the youngest of the White
House Intimates and can afford to
wait to male hi oonfeaslons.
All AUG
t:te. Iff 2 "Ti:
sauii Imf m i rr nisVi i I
Br Frank J.nkins
DROBABLY the most slgnifl-
cant question that is being
answers In Britain in these hec
tic days is this:
Can air power ALONE win
a warT
CLSE WHERE smashing at
" tacks by motorized armored
land forces have ACCOMPAN
IED the terrifying displays of
German air might: in Britain,
a stubborn, courageous people's
power to resist must be paral
yzed before it will be feasible
to follow up with land attack.
That creates a different sit
uation. DON'T believe much you will
read fnr . f.w Have Aroiir.
ate reporting of such a battle
as is raging over Britain would
be difficult even without the
handicaps of censorship. When
censorship and propaganda are
added to the physical difficul
ties involved, accuracy becomes
impossible.
If you will be patient, vou
will get in time a fairly depend
able picture of what has hap
pened. -THE British today are claim-
ing a "secret" weapon
some kind of plane trap that
is said to have entangled and
wrecked at least one German
bomber. British reports say it
is "efficient and formidable."
It is quite possible that it is
an American-invented device
that trails wire from anti-aircraft
shells which, when they
explode, drop a small parachute
that holds the wires temporarily
in the air where they will foul
the motors and wings of attack
ing planes.
Brief notice of such a device
was given in American newspa
pers several months ago. It
sounds as if the British may be
trying it out.
(German reports today refer
to it sneeringly as nothing more
than a silly plaything. The, Ger
mans, of course, fear the effect
of reports of such a weapon on
the morale of their flyers.)
"THERE'S a hen on again in
the Balkans.
The Greek destroyers are
bombed by "unknown" air
planes. (Officers of the Grek
ships watched the planes
through glasses and are said to
have reported flatly to the
Greek admiralty that they were
Italian.)
The Turkish press says an
Italian attack on Greece will
bring Turkey into the war.
riRGINIO Gayda, the Italian
editor who is supposed to
speak for Mussolini, says, the
sinking of the Greek cruiser
Helle on Thursday is a "British
maneuver aimed at rupturing
relations between Italy and
Greece."
If you have been able to be
lieve a lot of the propaganda
lommyrot peddled since the war
began, there is no reason why
you shouldn't try to believe
this.
NAB GANGSTER FOR
Hollywood. Aug. 17. U.P
Benny (Bugs) Siege), described
by New York police as one of
the "most dangerous gangsters"
in the country, was dragged
from the attic of his Holmby
Hills mansion today and arrest
ed on a charge of murdering
Harry Greenberg. alias Harry
Schaohter, former member of
the Lepke gang.
Greenberg, or Schachter. was
ambushed and shot to death in
his outomobile on a Hollywood
street last November.
Heads Washington Legion
Aberdeen. Aug. 17. ()
Rudy Nichols, of Monroe, was
elected commander of the Wash
ington American Legion for
next year, and Yakima was
chosen 1941 convention city, as
the twenty second annual con
clave came to a close in Aber
deen today.
. .'Ja Sr . , .1 -
THE
CAPITAL
PARADE
Br JOSEPH ALSOP and
ROBERT XINTMER
iConUmwd from Pag. One. I
congressional monopoly commit
tee and who is noted for his at
tacks on business' price meth
ods. He urged that the suits be
postponed pending study of
their effect on the defense com
mission's negotiations with the
oil companies. He particularly
urged study of the effect on ob
taining new facilities.
His view, seconded by labor's
representative. Sidney Hillman.
carried unanimously. When Ar
nold learned of the defense com
mission's attitude and Hender
son's heresy, he feared long
postponement or abandonment
of his beloved suits, and be blew
up.
In effect, he told the defense
commission that it misjudged
the oil business if it thought
concessions were needed for co
operation in the defense pro
gram; he charged the commis
sion with fostering price-fixing
of the worst type and costing
consumers at least $73,000,000 a
year. Arnold refused to delay
the proceedings. However, Bob
Jackson did not approve of
Arnold's belligerence and over
ruled him to agree that the com
mission be given as much time
for "study" as was needed.
There was a brief rift between
Jackson and Arnold which now
appears to be patched up, but
the feeling between Henderson
and Arnold has not disappeared.
...
DOTH Arnold and Henderson
advance their theories with
great emphasis. Arnold is under
stood to believe that much of
the trouble in France and Eng
land was caused by rigid prices.
He argued that in emergency
periods the government must
function even more vigorously
to prevent rigid price systems.
He is naturally against postpon
ing anti-trust suits, and instead
advocates direct subsidies to
essential defense industries. If
industry should refuse to coop
erate, he would invoke emer
gency laws to force coordina
tion. Henderson denies that he has
abandoned his antipathy to price
fixing and restrictive business
practices. He makes the premise
that the country's most import
ant task is re-armament. And he
urges that the anti-trust suits
may conceivably prevent the de
velopment of the increased fa
cilities which are vitally needed
in the oil business. He believes
the problem must be carefully
studied. Henderson's view is
shared by all members of the
defense commission.
That is where the matter now
rests. It may take several
months for Henderson's staff to
study the oil cases and decide
whether they will interfere with
national defense preparations.
Even when a decision is made,
it is a good bet that the presi
dent probably will have to inter-
Mr. & Mrs. Public:
We belter our admissions,
sp.clallr with th Det.ni.
Tax sdd.d. hsr. been going up
to point where they ar
working hardship on our
fsmily trad, which has always
been th foundation of shew
business.
1
EFFECTIVE TODAY . . . w
ar making th following
Chang In prices at th Crater
ian and Roxy Theatres and.
with your help, fe.l that w
can mak it.
Craterian Theatre
Malt: ret. Prre-t;r. Tas r. Tolal-snr
Eet: T.. mre-SSr, Tas 4e. Total-tnc
rtilldren U t. I.vt'ie
Kiddles (under l3)-iv
Roxy Theatre
Matinees: (at. Sun. Onl) tor na tas
Etea: Et. Price-tie. Tat St. Total-JV
Children It t. 15-!ne
Kiddies (under i:-lur
ro. A.
vene to dispose finally of th
conflicts.
Flight (T Tune
Mrdfor. an. JarkM Canty
Htrtore from I he files of I he
Mall Tribune IS snd SO jeara
at.
TEK YEARS AGO TODAY
August 18. 1830
(It was Monday)
Mid-west drouth areas pelted
by heavy rains.
Tl.trii- amelter at TolO to
be in operation by first for year.
riar. Row in "Love Among
the Millionaires" at the Crater
isn attracts big crowds.
Start nicking Howells in local
orchards.
Aimee McPherson and her
mother battle, and mother
emerges with a broken nose.
Democrats switch "smear cam
paign" from Secy Mellon to
President Hoover.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
August 18, 1920
(It was Tuesday)
Owing to so many members
kaini, nn trnratinns. the band
concert in the city park is called
off for tonight.
Georgia Minstrels to appear
here next week.
Work to start soon on Crater
Lake Highway between this city
and Trail.
"Burning Daylight" at the
Rialto; "The Great Secret" at
the Liberty.
Tennessee becomes the 36th
state to ratify the women's suf
frage amendment.
French troops fire upon riot
ing Germans in Silesia.
ORIENTAL
GARDENS
HI NT THF TRF. INC.
DANCING 9:30 to 1:30 Ku
Admliston (1.00 , u
per person, plus tas U