Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, September 26, 1941, Page 2, Image 2

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    Friday, Septotnbor 26 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 2
I
«■.»**
Washington, D. C.
SPIES IN CONSULATES
Vichy Ambassador Henry-Haye
recently let out a loud wail about
newspaper reports charging him
and his staff with undercover pro-
Axis activities.
It is possible that Henry-Haye
knows nothing about it. but govern­
ment authorities are in possession of
evidence that Nazi agents are on
Vichy consular staffs in this coun­
try. Also, that such agents have
been installed in Hungarian consular
offices.
It has been ascertamed that sev­
eral weeks before Axis consulates
were ordered expelled. Berlin, either
tipped off or anticipating the move,
quietly began shifting some of its
agents to Vichy and Hungarian con­
sulates.
The Vichy consulate in Chicago,
headed by Raymond Imbault-Huart.
was one of those that suddenly had
a mysterious staff expansion. An­
other was in the Hungarian consu­
late in Cleveland, directed by Louis
Alexy.
Two "investigators" were added
to Imbault-Huart's staff early in
June. These men were in constant
contact with the Nazi consulate in
Chicago; in fact, they called there
almost every day until the Nazi con-
sul departed in July. This was
definitely established by Dies com­
mittee agents and from a former
member of the Vichy consular staff
in Chicago, who resigned in disgust
after many years of service.
• • •
Exercise Can Bring Back
Lost' Youth and Beauty
SIMPLIFYING Tin: TAX BLOW
The senate finance committee re­
cently voted for the Simplified Chart
system for helping the public deter­
mine its income tax. It now seem»
certain that the Do-It-Without-The-
Dizzy-Spell idea will become law and
that the new arrivals within the in­
come tax classifications will atmost
be admitted on a Pay-As-You-Enter
system.
OSS
Secretary Morgenthau says that
with the rank and file of taxpayers
"it ain’t the money; it’s the con­
fusion." He contends that a man in
the lower brackets should be able to
go to a post office, glance at a chart
and find out what he owes Uncle
Sam without going nuts.
OSO
When the income tax was limited
to the Upper Brackets and only took
in a small proportion of the people,
it was all right to let them suffer.
There seemed no reason why they
shouldn't be given the works, up to
and including the headache, the
spots before the eyes, the night-
sweats, the nervous breakdowns
and the mad call for lawyers.
Photo made from Boston A Maine railroad freight >ard in Charles­
town, Sias»., »hows c!oud* of sniokc billowing over freight cars. All
Boston police and firemen on duty or uff were called to the scene, as
But the Every-Man-An-Einstein
were coastguardsmen from the navy yard. Apparatus from six adjacent
policy is to be dropped now that the
cities aided. There were live casualties, and the loss was estimated
income tax laws hive been eased so
at >750.000.
that anybody can get in.
• • •
Uncle Sam knows that if the rank
and file of his citizens were ever
asked to go through all that trouble
making out an income tax blank,
there would be what Willie Howard
calls a "re-wolt.” Either that
THE PRESIDENT S MOTHER
more mental collapses than our
Sara Delano Roosevelt thought stitutions could handle.
the man to whom she proudly re- ,
• • •
ferred to as "My son. the Presi­
Hence the “Not A Headache
dent" was capable of doing any­ A Carload" type of tax collection.
thing he set his mind to; and the
President would have done any- i
thing he could to satisfy her wishes. ' It is all right as far as it goes,
but it doesn't go far enough. We
But one favor he could not grant, think the tax blank should be made
despite his high office. Because of prettier. And carry a page of fun­
its intimate character, the story was nies.
kept a secret by the few who knew
it, but now that the gracious mis-|
We submit the following extra sug­
tress of Hyde Park has passed on, gestions for making tax paying more
it can be told.
painless:
During the Czechoslovak crisis
1. Make the tax blanks prettier
in 1939. the President was confer­ and include a page of funnies.
ring with advisers when a secretary
interrupted with word that his moth-i
er was calling from New York. The
President picked up the phone, in-
quired, “Yes, mother?”
Mrs. Roosevelt was in a state of
high excitement There was some
difficulty over a friend who had
come to this country from Europe.
He wanted to remain until he was
certain it would be safe for him to
2. Preface each blank with the
return, but the state department was words “Don’t Bother Reading This.
refusing to grant an extension of his See Your Postmaster.”
visa.
Couldn’t the President do
3. Inclose postage for return.
»omething?
4. Have the mailman leave each
"I’m sorry, mother,” he replied, blank with an apology and explain
"but I’m afraid I can't help you on that it's just too bad.
this."
5. Forbid lengthy discussion of
An excited buzz of conversation the tax blank in the home. Let the
came through the phone. It might busband say, "I guess I’ll run down
be dangerous for the friend to re­ to the post office and have my in­
turn.
Wasn't the President the come tax apprehensions attended
highest official of the government to.” and let the wife limit her com-
and couldn't he de something?
ment to “Okay. I hope it’s nothing
Roosevelt glanced helplessly at serious."
those about him. Then, with a pa­
6. Have the post office chart
tient smile, he again addressed the printed in colors and throw in a
phone.
couple of movie shorts in the cor­
"Mother,” he explained, "it’» ridor.
against the law.”
7. Require the postmasters to
This was one door even the Presi­ serve hot coffee and sandwiches
dent of the United States could not
• • •
open for his mother or anybody.
Do You Remember—
• • •
Away back when the ultimatum
NO SUGAR SHORTAGE
came first and the attack second?
Don't get alarmed about those ru­
• • •
mors of an impending sugar short­
"Japan is proceeding with the re­
age. The department of agricul­ construction of the Chinese continent
ture. which should know, isn't
with the full co-operation of China
Official statistics show that there Churchill’s charge that Japan is en­
is plenty of refined sugar for civilian croaching upon the Chinese people is
needs. Production in the next few wholly
groundless.” — Japanese
months, plus the reserve stocks of spokesman.
beet and cane sugar refiner»—
And then again, the world doesn’t
amounting to over 1,550,000 tons— seem to understand that those al­
will be more than enough to meet leged bombs are really flower pots
consumer demands until the next
• • •
crop
PORTRAIT OF A MAYOR
Only problem is what government
Into an airplane—
experts term "mal-location.” Due
Out of it quick!
to consumer hoarding, stocks in the
Into another
East are below normal, though rap­
With shovel and pick!
idly being replenished from the top-
heavy reserves of refineries in other
Off to a concert.
sections, chiefly the Gulf states.
Then—zip!—to a spot
As a double precaution, the agri­
To christen a ’.angar,
culture department ha» approved
A park or a.’l-hot!
sharp increases in 1941 marketing
quotas, which were stepped up to
Whisk! To some city
9,002,976 tons. This is 2,386,000 ton»
To dig a big hole.
more than the quotas announced at
Run a steamshovel
the beginning of the year and a mil­
Or help to mine coal!
lion tons greater than those ap-
proved July 30.
This way and that way
With gusto and joy—
Some sugar-producing areas, in-
"Flash” Fiorello,”
eluding Cuba, are not expected Ur
The Dynamo Boy!
supply their enlarged quotas, due to
heavy drains on their raw stocks,
but Puerto Rico ard U. S. beet areas
“Hank Greenberg Made Cor-
have plenty of supplies 'on hand to poral.”—Headline.
meet the new marketing allotments.
The Hanks are coming!
• • •
MERRY-GO-ROUND
Sen. Bob Reynolds' hopes to be
the bridegroom of 380,000-a-year
hcirless Evalyn McLean did not keep
the Raleigh, N. C., post of the
American Legion from scorching
him for his isolationism.
Friends of Jim Farley can always
tell when he is traveling abroad.
The genial ex-Democratic chairman
keeps them posted with a trail of
personally penned picture post­
cards. He mails them by the hun­
dreds. Farley visited Honolulu with
two of his children.
Double Chin Can lie onqiirred
A man named Low has been
named an official of the New
York gas shortage crisis.
• • •
Elmer Twitrtiell just couldn’t re­
sist the temptation. He walked up
to an auto bearing an “I Don't
Waste Gas” sticker and scribbled on
it "Wanna bet?”
• • •
Ima Dodo says she isn’t worried
about America being drawn into the
war for the next month or so. "It
couldn’t go in,” she explains, "un­
til after the world serie».”
Lynn rpsliaw Stambaugh. 51, at­
torney of Fargo, N. I>. who was
elected national commander of the
American Legion at their twenty-
third annual convention, in Milwau­
kee. Wla. Stambaugh served 22
months during World War I. 13
months overseas, and was commis­
sioned a second lieutenant of field
artillery while serving in France.
ETTING old? That double chin
J means only that yoq’re get­
ting soft!
Chin und neck exercise», you
know. C IB kRBQIllsIl R double ( Inn,
just us right exercises redu< <• fat­
ty hips or a bulgy tummy. When
unused muscles are brought back
to youthful firmness that “lost”
beauty returns!
• • •
Our 32 pags booklet ha* rxorcl*« rou­
tine* to correct all lh< »• llgura fault*, as
well a* poor po»ture. "dowager’» hump.”
heavy Iru*. Al*o ha* general dally ex­
ercise routine. *pei-lal eserdaes for relax­
ing ton*o nerve*, relieving aching feet.
Send your order to:
HEADER HOME SERVICR
117 Minna St. Han krxnrlxro. Calif.
Pickets Block Power and Light Plant
Enclose 10 cent* In coin for your
copy of BEST EXERCISE > OH
HEALTH ANU BEAUTY.
Name............................................,,,........... .
Addie»«..........................................................
Jaded Palates
The more we desire the more we
require. The more we demand to
whet our appetites, the more jad­
ed our pulute become». Rabbi L.
I. Newman.
INDIGESTION
what Doctor« U«» fur It
Dosrtorv ht»vw timi
Irappwl In IM •UMtMx-ti ar
gull»« may •»« Ills«* • hair I rig g •» o® «b» haart Th«ry
ga< gaa f»aa with «ba (»slot • aril ng malk-ina» bnowft
• tha fa»«a«<
Hb* «»»• »»adlHnaw InjMl
TabUla Try IMI ana ««lay If tha UltXT
■JoMn t pn*»* lull »M bwtlar, ra«um laHtla ta» u» a*4
faawirw IMJUIHX Maa»y barb
«I »U drug •toraa.
?
Distrusting
Trudging pickets prevented all but a few workmen from entering this
plant of the Kansas City Power A Light company after a strike was
called a few minutes before midnight. The city was plunged Into vir­
tually total darkness. Emergency treatments at hospitals were ham­
pered and surface line transportation came to a halt when power failed.
Tt is nioro disgraceful to dis­
trust than to I m * deceived by our
friends.—La Rochefoucauld.
Vice Pre»idrnt Henry Wallace
signs the >3.553,400 000 tax bill, larg­
est tax measure in American his­
tory. The bill then wrnt to the White
House for the President'» signature.
g a I F • I di « w.
c
DASH IN r»ATNin>?>
Small and Great
Small men hate,
nun pity.
while
great
Watch Your
___ Kidneys/
llrlp Them Clean*« the Blood
of Harmful Body Wa*te
Your khlnwys are constantly flltwrfng
wule matter from ths blood stream, liul
kidneys sometimes lag In their work do
not art as Nature Intended—fall to re­
move lmpurlt.es that, If retained, may
poison the system and upset the wboli
body machinery.
Symptoms mar be nafsfnf barkarba,
peri .stent hea<la<ne, atta>-ka of diisinrsa.
getting up nights, swelling, pufflr>see
under tha eyre— a feeling of nervoua
anilety and loss of pep and strength.
Other signa ut kidney or bladder dis­
order are sometimes burning, scanty or
too frequent urination.
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment Is w.eer than neglect. I s«
/Joan'» Pill». /Joan'» have been winning
naw friends fur more then forty years.
They have a nation-wid« reputatloa.
Are recommended by grateful people the
country over. A»k your nughborl
D oans P ills
To help conserve gasoline, the Gaslcss Club of America Is farmed
in New York city, with a number of socially prominent women taking
to their bicycles. The club, founded by Mrs. Abby M. Ricker and other»,
discussed plans for holding fox hunts in Central park. They are, left to
right, Mrs. Ricker, Miss Rosalie Stonebraker, Mrs. Albert M. Handy
and Mrs. Oscar C. Chopin.
Gen. John J. Pershing, A.E.F.
commander, who has just observed
his eighty-first birthday at a Wash­
ington, I). C., hospital, where hr
underwent his annual
physical
checkup.
lie told photographers
this was the last time he would pose
for the next 50 years.
WNU—13
$$$!$$$$$$$$$$$$
We Can All Be
EXPERT
BUYERS
‘Pop’ Patten Joins His Seven Sons in Navy Study British Needs
A
3f) 41
* In bringing ui buying Information, a*
■
R)
to prlc*« that ar« being atk*d for
whot w* Intend to buy, and ai to the
quality we can expect, the advertldng
column« of thii newspaper perform a
worth while tervlco which tavei u*
many dollars a year.
1
L
*-, %»..
• It Is a good habit to form, the habit
f/zz’
»■
I
of consulting the advertisements every
lime we make a purchase, though we
have already decided just what we
want and where wo are going to buy
It. It gives us the most priceless feeling
In the worldi the feeling of being
adequately prepared.
, Z>z,
À
: «
r
i
Saluted by admiral» and bluejackets alike, Clarence F. (“I’op”) Pat­
ten, 52-year-old former farmer and sawmill operator, joins his seven sons
on the battleship Nevada. The navy overlooked Pop’s age of 52 to enable
him to join his sons. Top row, left to right: Clarence Jr., Myrne, Allen,
Gilbert and Ray. Bottom row: Bruce, “Pop” and Marvin Patten.
Maj. Gen. George Brett (left),
army air corps chief, and Col. C.
Haynes, noted army pilot, will tour
Africa, the Near East and Mediter­
ranean to study British air force
needs. Data obtained will speed U,
8. aid to the democracies.
I
« When we go Into a store, prepared
beforehand with knowledge of what Is
offered ond at what price, wo go as
on export buyer, filled with self-confl-
donee. It Is a pleasant feeling to have,
the feeling of adequacy. Most of the
smhapplnets In the world can bo traced
to a lack of this feeling. Thus adver­
tising showa another of Its manifold
facets—shows Itself as an aid toward
making all our business relationships
more secure and pleasant.