FOUR MEDFOHD (OREGON)
MedfordTribune
"Evtryont In Southern Oregon"
Reads Tno Mall Tribune"
Dally Except Saturday
Published by
innMnn PRINTING CO
37.20 North Fir St Phone 2-141
ROBERT W RUHU. Editor
ERNEST R GILSTRAP Manager
KERB GItEY Advertising Mer
I C FERGUSON Managing tdltoj
ERIC ALLEN JR . City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN, Telegraph td.toi
HENRY L GREEN Sunday editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
GERALD LATHAM Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered at second class matter at
Medfnrd Oregon under Act ol
March 3 1897
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Flight o' Time
Madford and Jackson Counry His
tary frsm the (lies or the Mail
Tribune 10. 20 and 34 rears ago
10 YEARS AGO TODAY
February 27, 1940
(It Wu Tuesday)
County school census rovcals
9.740 attending schools; decrease
from last year.
Hearing on application of Cra
ter Lake National Far com
pany to discontinue bus service
due In March.
Northern California train and
highways traffic blocked by
floods; rowboats take people
from lowlands.
Mr. Btid Mrs. J. E. F.arlny
lense Holland hotel effective
April 1.
Wlllard E. Buchanan Injured
when bicycle he was riding
struck pickup truck.
20 YEARS AGO TODAY
February 27, 1930
' (It Was Thursday)
Communists stage riot In Lo
Angeles; march on city hall halt
ed by police with tea gas bombs.
Max GeBauer purchases local
Gold Seal creamery from S. A.
Kroschel.
Sheriff Jennings on trip on
Sams Valley hns wheel stolen
from his automobile.
Portland reports light foil of
mow; rest of state has rain.
34 YEARS AGO TODAY
February 27, 1916
(It Was Sunday)
Greater Medford club and
Drama league to plant tree on
library lawn as memorial to
Shakespeare.
Ledge of copper ore found on
slope of Roxy Ann said to be
worth $5 a ton.
Local Unitarian church follow
ers to hear Oakland, Oil., min
ister speak.
COMMUNICATIONS
Letters lo the Frtltnr must hear
the name and sclrirrnke of the writer
although itntlrr certain rlrrum
vlanres the use of a prn name ur
Initial for ptihltmtloii la prrinls
slhle. The Mnll Tribune ri-Nrrves
the right to rrilt all letters with a
view to clarification and rondrn
Ballon. I.rlters submitted tor pub
Mention nnnt not exceed 4lt m urns
To the Editor; Does Mr. Bar
ber really think he Is fooling
anyone as to how public opinion
Manna loriilly on the Kugtif riv
er project, by the ravings of him
self and the handful of so-railed
Preserve the Rogue die-hards,
the Iiaak Walton pals manv of
whom will tell one confidentially
that they are not only in favor
of the program, but nre support
ing the effort financially.
No, of course Mr. Barber
doesn t, and though he may sym
pathise with the poor taxpayer at
Kiwanls meetings, that sympathy
undoubtedly nu-ltg when he
draws his fat retirement checks
of said poor taxpayers' money.
And certainly he and his per
teverlng cohorts realizo that the
most one could hope to accomp
lish with their smoke screen Is to
slightly delay a program of pro
gress necessary to the prosperity
of southern Oregon citizens as a
whole, and though he will know
he cannot atop progress in the
end, he Is wilfully doing a great
harm to the property owners
long the river, many of whom
re trying frantically to sell, and
set from under the smoke screen,
but with no takers vailablc due
to the uncertainty of the final
disposition of certain property In
this area when the work on the
Rogue River Bnsln plan is
dually started.
C. R. Broughton
Tuberculosis is caused bv a
term the tubercle bacillus. It
was discovered by Dr. Robert
Koch in 1882.
PUBLISHER!
AisOC,AT.0N
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
r IasjcIjtQn
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Hoover Report and the DO A
The Hoover Commission's recent recommenda
tions for economies and more efficient operation in
various branches of the government have been the ba
sis of some thought-provoking discussions of mush
rooming bureaus and departments big government
getting bigger and controls more rigid.
Among the commission's findings the one regard
ing the administration of veterans' affairs brought
forth probably the loudest outcry, ex-servicemen's or
ganizations fearing there may be curtailment of some
of the advantages now enjoyed under the V.A.
e e
TN THE March issue of Country Gentleman, Dean
- Henry P. Rusk of the College of Agriculture, Uni
versity of Illinois, discusses an article in the magazine
concerning the Department of Agriculture. Dean
Rusk, who is chairman of the Hoover Commission's
task force on agriculture says the department should
be thoroughly remodeled.
As presently constituted the Department of Agri
culture is made up of a loose confederation of autono
mous bureaus and agencies with strong tendencies to
develop independent, overlapping and duplicating
programs, the dean declares,, and he urges that an
aroused public insist on a complete renovation.
e
TN 20 YEARS the Department of Agriculture has!
grown from 18,000 to more than 80,000 employees
and its share of the national budget has increased
from less than $17,000,000 in 1912 to a high in 1947
of approximately $2,500,000,000, says Dean Rusk. 1
Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan is
not to blame, according to the college dean, as he is
"just a new tenant in an old house to which additions
have been built year after year by preceding generations."
DY WAY of correcting the present set-up in which
u 20 different offices report to the Secretary, the
Hoover Commission s task force recommended crea
tion of six logical administrative units to include re
search service, extension service, agricultural re
sources conservation service, commodity adjustment;
service, regulatory service
service.
Adoption of the Hoover Commission's report is
not opposed by those honestly endeavoring to secure
efficient and economical governmental procedures,
asserts the dean, who argues that the real danger
comes from those who want to maintain status quo.
e
M0ST OF THOSE who violently resist change are
among the hundreds of thousands of govern
ment employees, said the dean, adding that "public
opinion is overwhelmingly in favor of the commission
report, but it is not so vocal as the opposition. If the
public allows this type of opposition to defeat our
country's major effort to improve the efficiency of
the executive branch of the government, we shall have
to admit that there is some
we are tending away from government of the people,
by. the people, and for the people,' toward a govern
ment by bureaucracy in the interest of its employees."
THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN article to which the
dean refers carries a report on the "confusion and
duplication of effort" at the local level. Citing De
Kalb county, Illinois, as an example, the magazine
says that in that one county alone there was a total of
178 federal farm agency employees last year, working
part or full time and drawing from $8 a day to $5350
per year. Of these, 123 lived in the county, while 55
lived outside but regularly visited it as part of their
duties. Not including the 55 living outside the county,
Uncle Sam spent $86,065.(50 in tax money to bring
their services to the county's
I he magazine points
conservation service's bill was $14,040 for offering
technical advice to 95 farmers 3.8 per cent of those
in the county which figures up to a cost of about
$147.68 each.
As a sample of the duplication observed, it was
stated that farmers get free advice on crop rotation
from at least three different government agencies,
and in some instances five.
rE KALB COUNTY farmers, like those in other
parts of the nation have been increasingly wor
ried about big government and have read or heard
about the Hoover report and how the cost of govern
!ment has skyrocketed from four to forty billion dol
i lars in two decades. They have learned how the num
ber of federal workers has grown from 600,000 to 2,
100,000 and how the average American must work
about 65 days a year to pay federal taxes alone.
Few farmers, however, have stopped to analyze
the number of federal-hired farm hands at the county
level.
AS ONE TAXPAYER put it: "We collect these
taxes, send them to Washington, but get only a
few dollars back. It's like a farmer giving himself a
blood transfusion from one arm into the other and
spilling a couple of quarts of blood in the process."
E.C.F.
Changes In Child
Labor Law Is Subject
Changes in the child labor pro
visions of the fair labor stan
dards act. also known as the
wace and hour law, will be ex-
plained in detail during a broad-1
east over radio station KYJC at '
7:4S p. in. Tuesday.
Madison R. Smith, investiga-1
tlon supervisor for the wane and
hour public contracts division
(or Oregon, will point out how :
the child labor provisions were f
strengthened by the Hist con-j
gross and how loopholes were
plugged by new amendments
whieh became effective Janu- I
ary 23. !
Dead line on Cltfi.n A1; 3 41
pm for lollowtni dey: 10 em Mon
diy, noon Saturday (or Sunday eta
Monday, February 27, 19S0 r
and agricultural credit
ground for the fear that
2500 farmers.
out that in De Kalb the soil
Subscribers
To report 1titiriptr or non
drhvrrv of iht .Mail Tribune phonr
tirforf A O p. m. daily and i
10:30 a, m. Smut it y
If regular dtllf trt arrive I
ihnrtlv after yon rail, pleaie nrmfvj
"Mire, thus ellmlnallrift iperlal
mrMrner lerMre. i
DROP HEAD COLD
2 dropi of Penetro Now tlmm 1
In earn, nostril check unUflei. A
nerret, cool, tooth You feci V.
iMmar quirmy ini 8 -drop wi
jshss; mm nose drops
Crosstown
' -Y V isi tn twiMmriwrawl
"I've teen other people's rumpus room. This looks about
the same to me just the way it it."
Your Health and Its Care
By DR. WILLIAM BRADY. M.D.
Readers should addren Inquiries to: Dr. William Brady,
265 El Camino. Beverly Hills, Calif.
SECRET CURES FOR
It has not been many years
since "secret" cures for alcohol
ism were widely advertised.
Even today,
in obscure
"throwa w a y"
magazines
serving as the
a d v e r t i sing
medium for
dubious pro-
ducts, one mayl
still find adver
tised offers of
secret cures.
The "secret
cure." is ad
vertised as a
drug which
may be placed
jr. drady
in the victim's food, without his
knowledge. Being first fortified
with the drug, the assumption
or the inference is that upon
drinking an alcoholic beverage,
the victim will get sick, and
blaming his sickness upon the
niconoi will drink no more.
This sounds too good to be true.
Thousands of gullible folks have
lound it not to be true.
l no question arises: If some
drug, harmless in itself, could be
given to a victim of alcoholism
which would make alcohol
loathesome to him would he
take it or would he permit oth
ers to administer it? The next
question is: Would the drug have
to be taken periodically, perhaps
for years on end or would one
course of treatment suffice?
Originated recently in Den
mark, a drug has been shown to
"sensitize'' a person to alcohol
within a few hours. In other
words, within a few hours after
taking an appropriate dose of
the drug, the drinking of an
alcoholic beverage will cause a
person to flush, become nauseat
ed, vomit and to experience a dis
quieting palpitation of the heart.
It might seem at first glance that
mat should be sufficient to more
or less permanently discourage
a person from drinking.
But does it? The drug, design
ed to be given by mouth, might,
conceivably, be given to a victim
without his knowledge, and if
effective, prove to be of enor
mous value. Upon the basis of
experience acquired up to this
point by interested investigators,
what are the prospects?
Danish physicians reporting on
their experience in one group of
S9 cases, state that 52 of these
were apparently cured of their
habit, at least for a period of 6
months. In the other cases, treat
ment either had to be stopped
because of the severity of the
reactions or because the patient
failed to respond or cooperate.
These doctors, however, made
the extremely important and sig
nificant observation that psycho
therapy was essential to the suc
cessful outcome of those cases
enjoying prolonged "cure."
Psychotherapy is a term ap
plied ,o treatment by psychologi
cal or psychiatric means, em
bracing suggestion, explanation
and other devices based upon
logic and reasoning. Without re
sort to (hi.- approach, those
"cured'' would not have been
cured. 1 wonder what the figures
might have been if psychother
apy alone without the drug, had
MABEL
CONGER-MORRIS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
AMBULANCE SERVICE
"prcferrd by to many"
Offic of the County Coroner
West Main at 6th Phone 3-1051
by Roland Coe
ALCOHOLISM
been employed In this group.
The possibility of a distraught
spouse secertly slipping this drug
into food with the hope of cur
ing the errant mate seems very
remote on both points. First, the
drug dosage must be determin
ed according to individual needs
obviously a problem for an
expert. Next, without proper
psychological guidance, the re-
suits would be very temporary.
I have no way of proving sta
tistically that this innovation
will ultimately be discarded as a
major approach to the problem
of alcoholism. But five years
from now, if you remember it,
you can quote me (as of now) as
tninking out loud that little will
be heard of it at that time.
I think so because addiction
to alcohol Is merely a type of ab
normal behavior and I doubt
that any drug is applicable to
the situation with the exception
of doctoring a hang-over. Re
course to a drug to cure alcohol
ism is merely an extension of
the original flight from reality
which is psychologically Involv
ed in the cause of the condition.
Perhaps it is the spiritual or
moral help men and women in
Alcoholics Anonymous groups in
cities and villages throughout
the country give one another
and particularly the novice or
guesi attending tne iirsi iew
meetings, that accounts for the
phenomenal success A. A. has in
restoring addicts to normal
behavior.
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
Growing Pains
Son. 14. has pains In legs. Doctor
finds nothing wrong and say It Is be
cause he is growing too fast, and that
he should rest at least half an hour
before eating. That Is hardly possible
while he is going to school. (C. F. D.I
Answer Probably calcium defic
iency. Send twenty-five cents and
stamped self-addressed envelope for
booklet, THE CALCIUM SHORTAGE.
Besides supplementing the boy's dally
diet with Ca and D. see to It that
he consumes not less than Pi pint
rthree glasses) of pure fresh milk
daily whole milk or skim mUk or
separator milk or buttermilk or what
ever kind of cheese he likes.
Goitre
If one has a goitre is surgery the
only cure, or will medicine cure or
help? what are the symptoms?
(Mrs. W. L. E.:
Answer Only a minority of cases
require surgery. The symptoms well.
Ma'am, they are what you complain
of when you consult your physician.
Best preventative for simple goitre or
for exophthalmic ("inward' or "toxic"!
goitre Is regular intake of sufficient
Iodine. Send stamped self-addressed
envelope and ask for pamphlet TH1-:
IODIN RATION. Food or nutrlUonal
Iodine, not medicinal.
(Copyright 1050 by John T. Dllle Co.)
LOOKED LIKE A PHEASANT
Alamosa, Colo. lU.R) The Ala
mosa Daily Courier, after print
ing an account about a hunter
who shot a cow, thinking it was
a deer, received the following
letter from a reader: "That cow
has nothing on our Holstein cow
that was mistaken for a pheasant
and shot during open season on
pheasants."
TO BE HONORED
Philadelphia. Feb. !7 'tU.Rl
Dr. Riiiton L. fctsenhower, newly-elected
president of Pennsyl
vania State college, will be hon
ored at the 41st annual dinner
of the Pennsylvania Manufac
turers' association tomorrow.
Use Mall Tribune Want Ads
CARLOS
Jackson County Farm Notes
Compiled by Counry Office O. S. C. Extension Service
Sawdust Workad Into Soil
Will Partially Eat Wet Ground
Was your garden a little too
wet to work in last week-end?
The rain has soaked up most of
the gardens just as they were
getting to the point where it
might be possible to get a few
early seeds planted. One way to
partially overcome this wet con
dition is to apply a liberal
amount of sawdust to the garden.
On heavy soils, four to six
inches of sawdust could be ap
plied and then thoroughly
worked into the surface few
inches of soil by spading or by
the use of some equipment like
a rototiller. On lighter soils, two
to four inches would be enough.
This sawdust has a remarkable
effect on the soil and loosens it
up so that it can be worked at
almost any time.
Any kind of sawdust is satis
factory. There is a lot of senti
ment against the use of pine be
cause of the possibility of its
containing detrimental resins
and pitches. However, there is
no basis for this, and any saw
dust that you can get would be
very excellent for the purpose.
borne people prefer sawdust
which is two or three years old,
thinking it might be better, but
fresh sawdust would be just as
good. In fact, it might be a lit-,
tic better because, being fresh,
it might last longer in the soil.
j The reason we put the sawdust
on is not so that it will rot and
turn into fertilizer, but rather so
that it will stay there and keep
the soil loose and easy to work.
For all practical purposes, there
is no fertility in sawdust. Its only
virtues are as a mulcn and as a
soil conditioner.
Basis For Thought
There is some basis for the
thought that sawdust contains
materials which are detrimental
to the soil. This is due to the
bacteria which, in the process of
rotting the sawdust, find it neces
sary to have a supply of nitro
gen. As there is not sufficient
nitrogen in the sawdust to rot it,
they are forced to extract nitro
gen from the soil. As a result.
when we apply sawdust and
work it into the soil, this results
in almost all of the fertility be
ing used to rot the sawdust. To
overcome this, it is necessary to
apply enough fertilizer to supply
the bacteria and have some left
over to grow a crop. Tests have
shown that this can be done by
applying 500 pounds of ammoni
um sulfate to an acre. This
amounts to about one pound on
a 10-by-10-foot square. Complete
fertilizers such as Vigoro and
More Crop will serve the same
purpose, but, as they contain less
nitrogen, it is necessary to use
about four times as much.
Another method of using saw
dust, which has been found very
successful, has been to get your
garden plants up a few inches
and then, after your initial crop
of weeds has been killed off, ap
ply an inch and a half or two
inches of sawdust as a surface
mulch. Any later cultivations
should be deep enough only to
stir the sawdust, and no cultiva
tion should be done except to
control weeds. Of course, where
this method is followed, it will
be necessary to irrigate by
sprinklers, as you couldn't flood
the water through the sawdust.
This mulch will conserve mois
ture so that less frequent irriga
tion would be required. The sur
face, which ordinarily dries out
rapidly, would also be kept
moist. This is the most fertile
part of the soil and by allowing
the plants to use it, their growth
would be improved. A mulch an
inch and a half or two inches
deep would also be found to con
trol effectively some of the weed
growth, although many weeds
will come through it.
Good For Strawberries
Strawberries are particularly
fond of a good mulch and, again,
sawdust serves this purpose very
well. When the plants start
growing in the spring, a mulch
four to six inches deep can be
applied and worked in under
the leaves of the plants. This as
sists in weed control, conserves
moisture and keeps the root zone
cool, all of which are very de
sirable for strawberries. In ad
dition, you have a nice, clean
mulch so when the berries lie
on it they are not at all soiled.
When used around such shrubs
as azalea, camellia and rhodo
dendron, the sawdust is also
very valuable. This heavy mulch !
reproduces the conditions found i
in nature and it also has a ten-'
dency to liberate a small amount I
of acidity which is required by 1
the plants.
Thotr and
lAeweitatct Seitm
WBTlMBi
im OREGON
BROADWAY
Another place where a saw
dust mulch would be found very
useful would be around new-set
trees. Young trees frequently
have trouble becoming estab
lished because, as they have
practically no root system, they
can not stand competition from
weeds and are very quickly in
jured by slight lack of soil mois
ture. If you are planting a few
trees around the home, you will
find that they require a lot less
care if you give them a good
mulch of sawdust. Trees being
reset in commercial orchards will
also do much better if well
mulched. Reset trees frequently
fail to grow, and this is due
largely to the competition from
weeds and surrounding trees. A
good mulch would maintain more
uniform moisture conditions, and
these reset trees should do much
better. C. B. Cordy.
Growers, Shippers Look
For New Export Markets
With the growing surpluses of
deciduous fruits in the United
States, growers and shippers
have been continually looking
for new export markets. As far
as the world markets go, the
U. S. must compete not only
with Argentina, Chile and Aus
tralia, but the expanding fruit
industry in the Union of South
Africa is also biting into the
world market. South Africa's de
ciduous fruit industry, located
primarily in the southwestern
Cape Horn province, developed
slowly from 1652 to where ret
turns to growers alone are now
$45 million annually.
They grow mostly peaches,
plums, pears, apples, grapes and
! apricots. Of the 20 major vari
eties of pears the bon Chretien,
bosc and packham's triumph
make up 70 per cent of the total
production. Bon Chretien is by
far the most popular for can
ning. The South African Industry
has come a long way in process
ing of their fruit and now ex
port canned goods, jams, marma
lades, dried fruit, pulp, wine and
brandv among other things.
Their search and progress are
extensive and on several occa
sions men from that region come
to the Medford area to study our
methods of growing and produc
tion. Their pests and problems,
as well as soils and climate, are
much the same as ours. How
ever, unlike us, their acreage Is
expanding and their labor prob
lems are not so severe but there
is a chronic shortage of commer
cial fertilizer.
Although their deciduous fruit
Industry is not well known to
us, it should not be considered
lightly as they have almost com
pletely taken over our market in
the United Kingdom and are now
starting ot export pears t the
United States.
March Is Time To Control
Scale On Evergreens
March is the month during
which we should take steps to
control scale on evergreens. An
effective control measure for the
pine needle scale insect, an en
emy of ornamental evergreens,
is a lime sulphur spray applied
next month. The spray causes
no injury to evergreens if ap
plied before growth starts. It
may be used as strong as one
part LLS to seven parts water.
The pine needle scale Is a
small but conspicuous white
scale located on the needles. It
lives over the winter in the egg
stage and during the spring
months the newly hatched in
sects crawl about for a short
time, then settle down and begin
to feed.
Lime sulphur is also one of
the more effective sprays to be
used in controlling juniper scale,
particularly troublesome on low
spreading junipers.
Molly and boxwood should be
sprayed if they were affected
with scale last summer. The
spray should consist of a three
ppr cent iignt-meaium summer
oil emulsion applied during the
last week in March or first week
of April. At this time the scales
seem to be particularly suscept
ible to the spray. The same mix
ture applied during the last
week in March would be a good
general recommendation to
clean up the scale on all ever
greens. Don Berry.
DOG CHANGES HOMES
Boston lU.R) John Carusone
knows where to go when his pet
ooxer aog is missing, ine wan
dering dog was taken to the Ani
mal Rescue league shelter the
first few times he was lost. Now,
he apparently thinks that is
home and keeps returning there
of his own accord.
mm
Haiti wK loth . . $1.30 up
Ratti without Both , . $2.00 up
In the Htarf of th
Shopping District
AND WASHINGTON
Morgantown, W. Vs. 0J.B
Square dance callers are being
trained at West Virginia univer
sity. Students at Mountainlair,
the recreation center, have form
ed the square dance club to spon-.
sor the events and to instruct
its members.
MEDFORD
PHARMACY
127 E. 6th
Just Off Central
9 A.M. 10:30 P.M.
For Complete
Prescription Service
2-6253
If No Answer Call
2-8582
Prompt Free Delivery
Baby Needs
Sick Room Supplies
Rentals
JIM GORDON
Bidgood Hudson
Medford's Own Modern
Pharmacy
FRANCISCO
ONE WAY $ 5.10
ROUND TRIP . . . 10.4S
Flui ftitrtt Ttm
Round Trip Tlcfcefs
Good for 6 Months
DEPOT
Fifth & Bartlert St. Phona 2-2202
MOTHERS, CHILDREN PREFER
THIS ASPIRIN THAT'S
FOR YOUR CHILD
1. SO PLEASANT
STJOSEPH
ASPIRIH
FOR CHILDREN
TASTING
I 3. PURE ORANGE
j FLAVORED
3. NO BREAKING
OF TABLETS
4. ACCURATE
DOSAGE
Th ortalMi at
Eirin for cmldrtn"
taring tho "$t.
Jophr' mm.
You need more than a 'salve' for,
CHEST COLDS
to relieve coughs and sore muscles
You need to rub on stimulating, pain
relieving Mustrole. It not only bring!
fast, long-lasting relief but actually
helps check the irritation end break up
local congestion. Buy Musterole!
Safer Cough Relief
When new drugs or old fail to top
your cold don't delay. Safe, depend
able Creomulsion goes quickly to the
seat of the trouble to relieve aculo
bronchitis or chest colds. Creomulsion
has stood the test of 'more than 30
years and millions of users. It contains
safe, proven ingredients, no narcotics
and is fine for children. Ask your
druggist for Creomulsion and take it
promptly according to directions.
CREOMULSION
Rtlnvej Coughs Chtlt Colds Bronchitis
eujtmeiooD
TO GET MORE
If your blood LACKS IRON!
You girls and women who suffer do
from simple anemia thst.vnu'r pale,
weak, "drayged out" tills mav be
due to lack of blood-Iron. So' try
Lydla E. Pinkham's TABLETS
one of the best home wavs to help
julld up red blood to "get more
strength and energy .1 such cases.
Pinkham's Tablets are one of the
greatest blood-Iron tonics vou ran
ouyl Buy them at any drugstore.
Lydia E. Pinkham's TAClfTS
25c v .
4
1