PAGE SIX
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1940.
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funs
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Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur ferry.
In the mldat of all the shoot
ing and ihoutlng the world
around, with nations In a quick
step for war and ruin, shines a
lone bright light of future hope
and cheer. Sen. Rufus Holman
(R-Ore.) announces in a formal
press release "I shall vote for
the election of Willkie and Mc
Nary with enthusiasm ..." It
was "with enthusiasm" many
Oregon editors noted on their
front pages the "enthusiasm" of
Rufus. It is similar fervor that
will cause proud parents to
name the late September babies
Wendell Willkie Jones.
Herr Hitler Is now In France,
and this Is viewed as a sign of
mighty doings in the invasion of
Britain. He may command the
waters of the English channel
to part and form a wall and
paved highway for the Nazi
hordes to march to the land of
their hate. If such a miracle
should come to pass they would
need it most on the way back.
Another finder of a hand
some sum of money has been
rewarded by the owner with a
quarter. One of these days the
tables will be turned. The finder
will give the owner a dime.
It now develops Secy. Ickes
was In line to make money
faster than votes for whoever
he opposes by the sale of "im
perforate stamps" (whatever
they are) costing $82 SO for a
profit of $187,417.50. The oldest
Roosevelt boy, selling insurance,
could have done no better. How
Mr. Ickes can be so vocally
mean with such prospects is
smoothing for the books.
Meet Olive Barber
f.iifftMM Nrwa rolumnliit
Who llt a Charr.r.
"Thoughts while pitting cher
ries on the front porch: Nice, this
having something to do which
requires no thought process;
grab a handful of cherries out
of the pail of water, pinch one
slightly, out pops the seed; drop
the pitlcss cherry in Abigail,
the big mixing bowl: keep pits
in loft hand until too many to
hold comfortably, then cast
them Into the little yellow ket
tle. Over and over. Simple as
that.
"While I know positively that
I haven't dropped a single seed,
yet I know just as positively that
some time this winter, most
likely when we're entertaining
the preacher, a cherry pit will
turn up in each and every pie;
and of course it will be his rev
erence who will crunch down
on the dental-shattering stone
Over a period of twenty-five
years, I've never known it to
fail.
"Here are two big red globules
whose stems are united; I'll
hang them over my car in the
time-honored manner. Now I'm
a Spanish senorita with a devas
tating manner; let the senors
pass this wav at their own risk.
I'm slim and ynung and a dash
ing brunette. Those who think
ine Just another rotund, hc-spec-tacled
matron domestically oc
cupied are poor sticks with no
Imagination.
"Maybe the 'Tap-around'
apron wasn't such a good idea,
after all. II has an undecorous
way of flipping open at the bot
tom. Oh, well, what if it does,
it's straining at a gnat and swat
lowing a camel, to be shocked at
a little unconventional display
of knees through an apron and
then never bat an ey at women
in sun or bathing suits. Time
people get a little i .'onable.'
Vss Mail Tribuua wani sua.
The Party Behind 3d Term
CECRETARY ICKES certainly laid himself open
when he made an issue of the characters of the two
parties behind the respective candidates this year.
Needless to say, the skipper of this column is no
worshipper of any political organization per se, the
Republican, Democratic or any other. But on the
basis of party we do maintain there isn't an informed,
right-thinking or self-respecting citizen in the country
that would not prefer the Republican to the Demo
cratic organization THIS YEAR.
In fact, compared to the Roosevelt backing, the
Willkie backing is lily-white and 102 pure. It is
essentially, as the Republican candidate has main
tained, a righteous crusade consecrated to the task
of saving this democracy from bankruptcy, demorali
zation and destruction. .
Also the Willkie leaders ARE, by and large,
AMATEURS, whereas the Roosevelt leaders are
PROFESSIONALS, extremely cynical and venal
ones.
I ET the truth be told, for example, regarding the
new leader of the DEMOCRATIC national com
mittee, Ed Flynn of the Bronx, who will have charge
of the 1940 Roosevelt campaign.
How did he make his money? What connection
did he have with the notorious "Dutch Schultz?"
What are the charges an
t z"1 . . 1 : - t xt-... v i-
ua uuaiuia ui new i oik, uruugni against mm I uoes
President Roosevelt endorse or repudiate the record
of his new party leader?
Then let the Republican candidate go to the
record regarding Boss Hague of New Jersey, Boss
Pendergast of Kansas City, Bosses Kelly and Nash of
Chicago, all in excellent standing, as far as the Dem
ocratic nominee and the third term campaign are
concerned.
LEST we again be misunderstood, let it be clearly
... ,.n Tfi HP i .' . T" - 1 - . r
cjv.ai.eu nC mc x maintaining rresiueni rtoose
velt is HIMSELF either dishonest or corrupt, on the
contrary we regard him as essentially an honest and
incorruptible citizen.
But we ARE maintaining that in striking out for
a third term he is not above ACCEPTING the support
of Democratic bosses who ARE NOT, professional
politicians, in fact, who ARE dishonest, who ARE cor
rupt, who ARE not only affiliated with, but leaders
of the most degraded, contemptible and criminal ring
of political gangsters at large in the United States
today!
CO in bringing up the respective morals and merits
of the two opposing parties this year, Secretary
Ickes, certainly violated the principle that those who
live in glass houses should not throw stones.
For neither he, nor any other defender of the
present administration, can face the facts, and
DENY that a VOte for thp npmrwatio pnnriirl;iti this
year, means a vote to sustain and perpetuate, in the
most populous districts of the land, the most unprinci
pled, demoralizing and evil political forces, function-
I u .! iL . Tf.'i. .1 Oi.i a it ...
iiig in me uimeo. siaies at
Pretty
AS for the rest of the Ickes harangue,. Mr. Willkie
" is entirely right in ignoring it.
To attempt any answer would be akin to answer
ing that familiar trick query of the shyster attorney:
"Have you stopped beating your wife; answer yes
or no!"
Either answer, any answer, would incriminate.
e e e e e
17E also share, and believe an overwhelming ma
" jority of the people regardless of party share,
the Republican candidate's feeling of genuine sur
prise and regret that the President of this country
should sanction such an undignified, scurrilous and
cheap-skate attack.
President Roosevelt knows, Mr. Ickes himself
knows, EVERYONE who has made the slightest in
vestigation of the Willkie record knows, there is, and
has been, no more unrelenting enemy of Insull meth
ods in the power business, and Tammany Hall meth
ods in politics than Wendell Willkie.
e e e e e
IT may be true Mr. Willkie at one time praised Insull
as a civic booster and brilliant promoter; Insull's
bitterest enemy wouldn't deny it
It may also be true that Mr. Willkie. a life-long
Democrat and a public-spirited resident of New York,
worked with members of Tammany Hall. for you
can't do any effective political work in New York
City, for that party without such association.
But the Republican candidate first attracted na
tional notice by his fight against Insull methods in
public utilities, and the cornerstone of his political
philosophy is, and always has been, in utter and com
plete opposition to every principle and political j
method that Tammany Hall represents. i
e e e
R. WILLKIE doesn't believe in universal public
" ownership. He doesn't believe in the govern-'
ment, through its taxing power or federal competi
tion, running legitimate and law-abiding PRIVATE
i business out of existence.
I But he DOES believe
tures like Bonneville and
should be continued, and
pointed out in his acceptance speech, in the rapid
extension of cheap rural electrification.
e e e e e
SECRETARY ICKES knows this, so does the Presi
,lnnl Wl,,. ul,l.l At.. Willi
Willi. i n4, ,-iiMMii .UI,
; I he ppoplo of the rountry
I campaign is finished 1
ardent New Dealer, Mayor
i Li l -
tne present time. ,
Cheap!
j
that the government ven
T. V. A., firmly established,
he also believes, as he .
II lllltv CH.H'P tu itn:wti.
will know it before this
,
Personal Health Service
Br WUllam
Sl(nr lettm pertaining ta peroral health aotf h;g1en. o tflMM
aiasncMlt or treatment, mil b an wired bj Dr. Brady ir a atamprtf aelt
addrnaed enielopa u anrloard. Utters should be orter and written In Ink.
Owlnf to tht larsa numbers ol letters merited only a few ran bt) answered.
No reply tan be made to queries not conformlne to Instructions, address
Dr. Hllllsra Bradj, tSS El Cam I no. Beterlj Hills. Calif.
SALT AND
Many tramps wet the bed, re
marked Ernst von During years
ago, not because they are
tramps. They are tramps be
cause they wet
the bed.
A sixteen-year-old
boy
nearly ready
to g r a d u ate
from high
school began
to consider
running away
because he was
barred from
f o Mowing
a technical ca
reer in which
an opportunity was available, by
the bed-wetting habit. The boy
was able to understand that his
trouble was not "weakness nor
deficiency but merely a matter
of habit. Physically and mental
ly he was above the average.
With the aid of simple regula
tion of diet and an earnest en
deavor on his owp part to gain
better control over the function
affected, and some routine med
icatlon such as any doctor might
prescribe in the circumstances.
he succeeded in overcoming his
handicap and continuing in his
chosen career. Otherwise he
might hav-3 become a tramp.
A correspondent who does not
give his age writes:
"Ashamed that I continued at
my age to wet the bed, I con
ceived this plan to stop it
Whenever I felt the call I would
kick some stone, post or other
object and purposely restrain or
delay answering the call. After
a while, even when asleep, the
call would set me kicking and
this would be sufficient to
awaken me I have never wet
the bed since."
That is good psychology. The
function of micturition is pri
marily a reflex or automatic one
which does not necessarily re
quire conscious volition or con
trol. It is natural for infants to
wet their clothes when awake,
the bed when asleep. Gaining
conscious control over the act
is a matter of training by con
ditioning the reflex, as the nurse
or mother teaches the infant
eight or nine months old to as
sociate emptying the bladder
with sitting on chamber pot or
small toilet seat where she
places and supports the infant
regularly every two hours thru
the day: or as the correspond
ent E. F. M. conditioned the re
flex by kicking on some object
whenever he felt the call.
Restricting the fluid Intake
Washington, D. C. Aug. 21.
For the next few days this col
umn will be devoted to the poli
tical situation in Oregon as af
fecting the presidential cam
paign. The assumption that Ore
gon will be carried by the Will-kie-McNary
ticket because Ore
gon's Charley McNary is the
vice-presidential nominee Is
challenged hy new dealers while
some republicans express doubts
when they think of the smash
ing majorities Mr. Roosevelt has
had in his two previous con
tests. To get at the heart of the Ore
gon situation opinions have been
solicited and received from
many of the smartest political
observers In the state. These ob
servers cover the range from
labor leaders and labor rank
and file to Jrffcrsonian demo
crats, new dealers, oflice hold
ers, professional and business
men. practicing newspaper men
and farmers. They constitute a
cross section of the men (and
women) who take an active in
terest in matters political.
A symposium of the views of
this cross section should be a
fair reflection of what is goins
on In Oregon's composite mind
politically.
TltF first thlii that Impreeeea a
iMtlng political writer Is the
presrnoe everywhere of Wlllkle-Mc.
Nary buttons and the absence of
RtxNievelt buttons. In IPS a landoti
Knov button was a rarity: It required
fortitude and revsiesnneea to be seen
wcsrinc one in that campaign tour
years ao eery Orit-.'n htdhwsy car
ried a a'.mm of traflir In which
three out of every five cere carried
a banner on the b-.imper proclaiming
"Rooeexelt for President - The other
two cars were not decorated with
tandon streamers.
It mev well be that the new drat
orrfani.-aTio'i hss not h-rn furnuried
th -vi I - -r.ivrr ..-d r:cl lrei
of Mr : e.t ::--.. at thl
tune (Auf jst 1.U lAej ware, as
Brady. M. O.
PSYCHOLOGY
after S or 6 p.m. and then giving
the child bedtime meal of
bread or crackers (salty) and
salty butter and either ham or
corned beef or dried beef or
pickled herring or salami the
large amount of salt in such
food serves to retain water in
the tissues without causing
much thirst, and the child sleeps
the night thru without wetting
the bed.
An Italian pediatrist. Dr. G.
Macciotta, reported in Pediatria
(Naples) 11 1-'31 -that in many
cases of bed-wetting the blood
calcium was below normal, and
this is commonly associated with
a peculiar tendency toward
spasmodic conditions. The ad
ministration of calcium and vi
tamin D to such children is like
ly to give better results if the
children also receive adequate
daily rations of vitamin B com
plex. The treatment of bed-wetting
acquired, perhaps following
some illness, years after a child
has been "bed broken," Is a
problem which demands medi
cal attention and the first es
sential of medical treatment in
such cases is analysis of the
urine.
l ESTlONft AND ANSW ERS
Uvea
Husband suffered mucb In the past
four summers from raw red spots on
his akin with much burning and
Itching and ararry looking welts.
Altho he laughed at the Idea of
taktne medicine. I finally persuaded
him to try soluble potassium chloride
you suggested in the pamphlet on
hlvea. Relief waa almost Instanta
neous and for the first time In warm
weather he la free from any algna
of the trouble. He ta grateful and so
am I. Mrs. W. h.)
Answer On request I am glad to
send pamphlet on "Hires" and .'Re
lief for AllerKT" the latter tells hew
to use potaaslum chloride solution.
Inclose stamped envelope bearing
your address.
How to Gain Weight
I am happy to report that in less
than three months I have gained
IS pounds weight and now am nor
mal for my height. I believe It la
due to the vitamin B complex and
vitamin D recommended In your ex
cellent pamphlet. My general health
and "vlte" are so much better, too.
(Mrs. R. E. M.)
Answer Thank you. Copy of "How
to Oaln Welhf and booklet "Re.
serve Power" mailed on request If
you Inclose 10 cents coin and tamped
envelope bearing your address.
(Protected by John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note. Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
tVllllam Brady. M. D 2fiJ El
Camlno. Beverly Hills Calif.
stated, everywhere present on coat
lapels, on automobiles and In the
windows of homes.
Visually, whatever the reason. Re
publicans are making the beat display
In Oregon at the moment. Possibly
the kicking out of Jim Parley by
the White House Inner circle and
reorganisation of the national com
mittee haa delayed the buttona and
other display advertising.
OBSERVERS state that business
and profesaional men and their
employes are practically 100 percent
for Willkie and McNary. Thla waa
not true in I93. At that time there
waa little enthusiasm for the Landon
Knox ticket; Landon did not click,
and Knox (now In Mr. Roosevelt's
cabinet l denounced without quallfl
cation everything the Roosevelt ad
ministration waa doing. Many busi.
ness men approved of some new deal
objectives. Republican party workers
had little heart In the cauae. recog
nising that they were doomed to
defeat.
Big business, which haa been
whipping boy for the new deal. Is
actually little business, for punish
ments meted to so-called big busi
ness haa hurt also the little fellow.
In the past four years little buslneaa
haa felt the restrictions which have
curbed Initiative and handicapped
expansion. These are matters which
have changed the sentiment of the
small merchant and shifted htm to
the Republican aide.
TROUBLES with labor have con
tributed to costing Mr. Roosevelt
much employer support. In Isrge pert
this trouble haa come through gov
ernment agencies, such aa the Na
tional Labor Relations Board. There
baa been general agreement on the
Wagner labor act but the peculiar
and frequently unfair dectetona or
the board In administering the law
are the seat of the dissatisfaction,
and the board haa crested discord
where formerly harmony and good
will existed between trie bona and
the workman. Theee are matters
which dfd not enter Into the cam
paign of !M but now must be
reckoned with In a time when every
vote counts.
On the surfsce. therefore. It looks
ss though the employing class Is with
Willkie and McNary. This ts but one
of several groups and is not sufficient
of Itself to determine the outcome
In Orcaron. Equally important are
the farmers of Oregon, the Demo
crats, and. of couroe. tabor, which
haa more ballots to deliver than any
other group.
What experienced observers of eech
of these groups think of the contest
between the new deslers and the
Republicans will be set down in
order They voice the drlftwhet
ever It t -f Oregon in the cam
rs:n and can he arcrr.-j ss the
considered judgment of db and
Nominated To
I '
Claude H. Wickard (right), Indiana farmer, was nominated by
President Roosevelt to succeed Henry A. Wallace (left) as secre
tary of agriculture. Wallace is resigning to campaign for the vice
presidency of the United States.
women who know
fields.
their particular
THE
CAPITAL
PARADE
By JOSEPH ALSOP and
ROBERT KINTNER
(Continued from Page One.)
now, decisively, to meet the threat
we shall be too late."
THE disparity haa always seemed
completely fantastic, between the
calm face shown to the world by
the president, and the desperate
private pessimism of every Informed
man around htm. Proof was lacking
that the president shared his advis
ers' pessimism, until It waa supplied
In the Bullitt speech. Certainly Uiere
could be no better proof than the
president's spproval of an unvar
nished, unqualified prediction, by one
of his own ambassadors and most
Intimate friends, that within 13
months the American way, the Amer
ican government, the very Independ
ence of the American ' people, may
all have fallen before the German
onslaught. .
The Bullitt speech, of course, seems
to substantiate Wendell Winkle's
charge of lack of candor In the
president. There Is reason to hope,
however, that the president himself
will follow Bullitt In telling the
people frankly what he believes to
be the truth.
Whether he does or no will depend,
no doubt, on the total reaction to
Bullitt. In the senate, news of what
Bullitt aald In Philadelphia promptly
touched off a violent demonstration.
In which Senators Burton K. Wheeler,
Bennett Chsmp Clsrk and other
Isolationists joined In shouting for
Bullitt's blood. Impeschment or both.
In the country, on the contrary, the
reaction appears to have been good,
for both the White House end Bul
litt's office at the state department
have been deluged with approving
telegrama. and editorial comment hsa
generally been favorable.
WHATEVER the president decides
to do, Bullitt may be expected
to carry on what he regards ss a
vitally Important campaign to edu
cate the American people. His gloom
Is so complete that he haa told
friends he very much doubts whether
anything can be done to avert the
peril ahead. He expecU Englsnd to
go under without aid from this
country. He questions whether the
aid can be obtained In time. He
la positively convinced that the de
feat of England will soon be followed
by a Oermsn attack on the I'm ted
States. And he ts equally sure that
our rearmament cannot be quirk
enough to make really sure the ward
ing oft of such an attack. Tet he
also feels, as he puts It, thst It Is
his Job to ' shinny on hla own side'"
until the end of the game.
Two questions remain. Why has
not the president spoken out before?
And are Bullitt and the president
right In their dark views? To the
first, only the president can supply I
the answer, and to the aecond only ! - "',,u"uon ,ne IO"' earnings
th, future, it must be said. how. J" ,ne "oosevelt family were
ever, thst if trie senators who de-' ,i5,ed as a matter of interesting
nounce Bullitt are right, they must I news, but only the methods of
ce rlht by Instinct only. Bullitt, on
the. two sons. particularly
live other hand, haa all the ava labie I James, were in anv way critic'i
mtormatton at hia disposal, and hs. ! cd. Mrs. Rooevelt In V?ct was
Ihed close enough to the event to I
form a competent Judgment. Before 1
they dismiss his warnings as foolish 9 .
and groundless, the senators might i
also remember, thst from the dav i
when Bullitt exactly forecast the '
reaulta of the Versalllea treaty In !
Parle In 19 1 . he haa proved a sur- '
prlstnglv accurate, if often Irr.tatmg
and Indiscreet prophet.
Control Brush Fire i
Bend. Aug. 21. V One!
hundred and fifty men and mo-
tonzed trenching equipment
stemmed a 2000-acre fire today
six rril-s east cf the twin ror
thrrn K!a.natH co.'v towns of
Gilchrist md Crescent.
Succeed Wallace
Communications
Declares Editorials Unfair
To the Editor:
I desire to call attention to
two instances in which the us
ual spirit of fairness that char
acterizes your editorials were
missing. I refer to an editorial
Inst week containing a list of
the alleged earnings of the
Roosevelt family, exclusive of
the president, on the authority
of an unnamed contributor.
Eleanor Roosevelt, the only one
on that list that th- president
could be possibly held respons
ible for, wa3 listed a earning
$1,000,000 and over.
Waiving the piffling and ri
diculous contention that any
Chief Executive should be re
quired to certify to his financ
ial integrity during his official
incumbency, it seems to me in
all fairness to the lady you have
so frequently expressed admir
ation for that you should have
added that her earnings were
disbursed to charitable under
takings. All of the Eleanor
Roosevelt earnings derived from
public sources, with the excep
tion of income tax deductions,
have been donated to philan
thropic enterprises and for a
considerable period of time she
even paid the income lax as
sessments on same out of her
private resources.
The second instance has ref
erence to Mr. Willkie's chal
lenge to debate, covered by your
Sunday editorial and in which
you say: '-Well, why not? Abra
ham Lincoln had time to debate
with Senator Douglasx. why
shouldn't ihe president?" That
is certainly an unfair compari
son and not a precedent as the
famous Lincoln Doug'ass de
bates took place in 1858 when
both participants were renator
ial candirintes and their debates
were confined to the state of
Illinois. Moreover, that occurod
back in th circuit rider, poney
express, tallow candle era when
Edison and telegraphy were on
ly fourteen years of age. tele
phone, wireless, radio and air
mail undreamed of and daily pa
pers limited to metropolitan
eastern centers.
I can conceive of nothing that
would be more gratifying to the
totalitarian dictators, in the
present crisis, than the spec
tacle of the president engaged
in the Nero-like fiddling of
words incident to debate. Mr.
Willkie having nothing else on
his mind will have ample op
portunity between now and
November to demonstrate his
forensic ability and all of which
will not interfere with critical
affairs of state. His 'Mein
Kampf' to date, at least, indi
cates that he is not afflicted
with an inferiority complex.
Fred Kelly,
911 Queen Anne
Editors Note: In the editorl-
:i ' . ,r , . lne
TRY OUR HERBS
-WHEN OTHERS FAIL
Recommended f.w olds. Inflnena. rheumall.m. nerv
or:n.r.,.ndmg",nd""" -
The CHINA HERB CO.
I lee A
: r Mvn st.
specifically exempted. The fact
remains she has. during her
eight years in the White Houso
and because of that fact, earned
approximately $1. 200.000. and
according to our information,
only the portion derived from
radio broadcasts has been de
voted to charity.
Joins Jenkins Camp
To the Editor:
Congratulations on your re
cent political editorials. They
have been honest giving credit
where credit is due and arriv.
ing at the logical conclusion that
Willkie is the man.
I'm joining Frank Jenkins
camp.
An ex-Democrat,
H. M. JOHNSON.
Aug. 21. 135 N. Holly.
Flight 0' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of the
stall Tribune 10 and SO years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
August 21. 1930
(It was Thursday)
Drouth conditions in Eastern
Oregon are denied, and no fam
ilies leave district.
Dr. Spears, UofO. football
coach on visit here says "pros
pects are only fair for coming
year."
Local revellers in apartment
house are fined $10 and costs.
Start gathering tomato crop in
Eden valley.
Northwest rum czar contrib
uted $250 to WCTU he testifies
at federal trial for Volstead Act
violation.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
August 21. 1920
(It was Saturday)
Price of wheat drops as pcaca
looms in Poland.
American team in Olympics at
Antwerp picked as winners.
Democratic nominee Cox at
tacks Senate stand on League of
Nations.
Bartlett shipments
total 114 cars.
to data
The Page theater to be re
modeled into modern movie by
the George A. Hunt company,
and opened for business Octo
ber 1.
President Wilson orders Po
land not to send her army in
war with Russia, beyond th
"ethnographic boundaries."
'FIGURATIVE' KEY
Salem, Aug. 21. f,p) Sen
ator Charles L. McNary will be
given tne key to the city when
he arrives in Salem next Sun
day for the ceremonies follow
ing Tuesday when he will ac
cept the Republican vice pres
idential nomination.
Mayor W. W. Chadwick was
instructed by the city council
to give the senator the key
which will be a figurative one
unless a real one is obtained.
Wool Still Quiet
Boston, Aug. 21. P)-(USDA)
The Boston wool market con
tinued quiet today.
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to be, if you'll J
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