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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1938)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD M ATL TRTBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. MAY 31. 1938. MEDFORDw&&TRIBUNE MKvrynn Id Mum there Oregon lUiidn thf MnII rrltufi." ail Kir,)! taturdajr. PuhllontMl b UUUruKD PRINT1NU CO. Ii-lilt N fir St. Fhona rfc RUHBR1 W RUHU CrlHor. BRNK8T R QILHTRAf. Uinager An InfWpeKKUni Nwappt Batrd conft-ciM mailer At Mad Cord. Oregon, unrici Act of March I. IMS 81!HHi'RIPT10N RATES Bv Uall In Advene; Dally, one ttir wo Dally. ii mnnthi 316 Daily on month fli By Carrier, Hi Advene Medford, Aeh land. Jacksonville. Centre! Point, Phoenii Talent. Uold Hill and or hlehwara: Dally, one year. . M-UO Dally, eli monthi. . , , . S.ZI Dally, on month AH iirmi caeh in advanc. OfflclHl Paper of the City of 41 rd ford Of firm I I'm per nt JiirkiwD Vaunt y UKMIIKH IIP I'llft 4WMIM I'KI I'KKHH Kei-elvlng Pull I. IVIrr Nervlr The Aptcieie1 Prae i eirlueively en titled io the use for publication of all new -liepitchev credited io it or other ir lee ordltd to rti1 paper, nd alio to th meal new puhllehed herein. All right for publication of pcial dlapalflhet herein are alan reaerved. HEM UK 11 OF UNITED I'HKHB MrtMRER OF A DDI1 BURICAI1 OF Rt'IIIjATMN8 Advertising .tepretentatfv OfflOM ID N.w Vr.i k. Matrolt, in Francisco. Lot Angalat. Hlattl. Portland. Bt Loan, Atlanta. Vancouver, Member OtegoiTNewspapei 0 Association rTJblih Ye Smudge Pot By Arthui Pert). The American fleot has been trans ferred from tho Pacific coast to tho Atlantlo coast. The action will per mlt the enlisted personnel to attend the New York World's Fair, and 1 expected to Impress European na tion! with warlike tendencies with Yankee naval might. No alien groups seeking to establish Nazism, Fascism, or Communism In this, land have filed a protest, as yet. , The spoech a Montana congress man Is bound and determined to deliver In Jersey City, N. J., still nestles undelivered In his manly chest. This unspeakable horror leaves few. If anybody, astounded and aghast. There Is a definite opinion the solon has harvested sufficient publicity, his constituents have been Impressed with his vaudeville, and, Inasmuch as he has nothing to say anyway, It will be no national ca lamity, If he never says It In Jersey City. FUTILITY! (Lakevlew Examiner) Never a day goes by without someone saying something about somebody ought to build some more houses In the town. Out- . aide of such comment, however, little seems to bo done about It." All Is cslm on the Oregon politi cal front, save for a school district election, here and there, and a mnd Democrat cussing nn Oregonlan edi torial. Memorial Day was fittingly ob served. Scores attended ceremonies honoring the hero dead: hundreds went fishing and vacationed, and thousands attended sports oventa. , "Congresswoman Mary Norton of New Jersey, shepherdess of the wage hour bill in the House, has been sporting a hat so heavily festooned with lilies of tho valley that few. If any, hats like It have ever been seen before." (Chlto (Calif.) En terprise) Olrls, there's a hat for you I A It-year-old boy was acquitted of the murder of hie htgh school sweetheart by a New 'York Jury. They found the youth was Insane, when, as pnrt of a suicide pact, he fired a bullet into her brain. He never kept his part of the death agreement. The parents of the slain girl bespoke mercy for the slayer, the courtroom throng cheered the ver dict, and the parents of slayer and slain "met In tho defense attorney's room, mid lauphtcr and tears." press reports reveal. This Is broadmlnded nee to the Nth degree. The youth will be further Inconvenienced by a psycopathlc examination, ere a certain freedom la granted. Many will await the last chapter of this strange epl- slde. The law of compensation as yet has not started its course. Pious gloating over the defeat of Governor Martin In the primary has stsrted among New Deal nabobs. The glib scribes have started g;orlfy Ing the victor, as possessing a special and great purity of affection for Administration notions. Betrayed Oregon democrats are due for a soft soap baptism, and pleas to turn the other cheek. Constable Nick Young received both the Republican and Democratic nomination In the primary. Under Oregon law, he can't run aKalnst himself In the fall, to will have to' make up his political mind. Sopranoes flocked to the pull and haul contest last night, as there was a bargain. The gladiators perspired freely, as the fair spectators noted each other's hats. Most of the aqursilng originated In male throats None of the grspplers were hand some, so the special guesu did not let their sympathies play. The sollcl tudo of the referee wes too much for the losers. Decoration Day Reaction i EOR many years Decoration Day baa been an increasingly patlietio spectacle. Yesterday the sombre note was even more pronounced than usual. One wondered, as here and elsewhere the few survivors of the "days of '61" passed by, if in another year, there would be ANY boys in blue remaining, not only here in Southern Oregon, but throughout the; country. Probably there will be a few. But the time is not far dis tant when all will be gone of course. Time marches on at a ter rifio and pitiless speed, when a group of men have reached their nineties. But what impressed and depressed one observer, at least, was not so much the PHYSICAL evidences of mortulity, (af ter all when men have so gloriously LIVED their lives, the final sleep should have a certain welcome and perfectly rational ap peal) , as the spiritual ones. That is, it was sad to gee the ravages of time, the tragic thinning of those ranks the bent forms, the tottering steps, sad, very sad. But far more snd was the thought, that not only are the boys n blue now marching into the sunset, never to return, but per haps a definite ideal a fine and high tradition goes with theru. AT any 'rate, Decoration Day has always been a day to pay ' tribute to those who were willing to DIE. that their coun try might LIVE, and we wonder, if in the mind of the present generation, particularly among the youtnrul intelligenzia that idea isn't pretty much discredited, out-moded, in Bhort TABU. Only the other day a certain senior class, in a certain Amerr can college, voted over three to one, against fighting to de fend their country against a foreign foe. (Think of that I Not a war, like the last one, in foreign lands, but a war purely of defense, ngninst nn invader I) Now this column io strongly pacifist. War is both madness and futility, and in this day and age should be outlawed, pre cisely ns murder is outlawed. Hut practically, ns wo see it, such' a conception, entirely ra- tiomil though it is, can't he realistically accepted or effectively applied. We don't want war. NO one wants war. But nevertheless, there are wars all about us there are nations, powerful nations, definitely committed to the plnlos opliy of war, and in common prudence we as a nation must not only be prepared for war, but our citizens, must be pre pared psychologically, to fight. In other words that willingness to die that the country might live, should be as living and as vital a principle today, as it wns three minrlcrs of a century ngo. For sooner or Inter, a country, which is not in the minds of it's citizenry worth dying for, won't for long be worth living for. , . PKKHAPS wc nrc unduly pessimistic, or it may have been thoso picnic pickles wc mixed yesterday with the mustard and milk. But the most poignant feature of the 1939 Decoration Day parade, was not so much the passing of the members of that pathetic rear guard of the 0. A. R. over the Ureal jjivme, as the ideal of a fighting patriotism, the willingness to give that "Inst full measure of devotion" that we fear, went with them. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene act to disease, diagnosis or treatment will Be answered by Dr. Brady H stamped self addressed envelope ts enclosed Letters should be brtel and written In ink Owing to tbe large number ai letters received only a few ran be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, tss el Camlno. Beverly HIUs. Calif. EXAMINATION JITTERS AND STAGE FRIGHT i2 Disney to the Rescue SPEAKING of pessimism, tho quality lias ueen nescnoeci a the ability to see only the hole in the doughnut. Not bad. nd the larger the hole, the harder it is to disregard. Tf one could secure a grand stand sent on the moon, and thus enjoy a proper perspective of this ball of dirt, we have an idea. thnt hole would appear larger toilny, man at any time in it- cent history. The observer however, would still be foolish to turn his bi noculars on the vacant space alone, Dut snouio. ibkb m me cub ing cinder in its entirety. And if he did ho might find a small item on an inside page in small print, which would be very cheering indeed. This is none other than the announcement tnat. wan uisnej ... . .. tit 1 I J 3 U. & Co., have secured the rights to Alice in wonueimnu ..u original illustrations, and will produce" same as another super feature in the near future. Here certainly is something to look forward to, und as '-nc world appears to tumble around us, nang on to. If Mr. Disney can capture the delicious numor ana cumin of this imperishablo British classic aim ne nas never iu ... this direction yc(,-then whatever may befall, life will still be worth the living, and no matter how grim and painful reality, the nearest picture theatre will offer a beneficient "escape I" They are practically the same mal sdy, though which ! worse depends on which you have at the moment. Examination Jitters has gradual on set beginning several weeks before the test or amlnatlon, 1 creasing day by day, reaching its peak at zero hour. It sticks there until you have hurriedly over the ques tions and form ed a rough Idea how many you can hit hard enough to get passing mark or no mafk at all, as the case may be, then the attack terminates abruptly, by crisis, like lobar pneumonia, only Instead of going Into a heavy sweat you Just realise how allly you were to worry so much about the darned thing. Stage fright has a sudden onset, coincident with tm invitation, re quest or notice to address the meet ing or take a role In the cantata Temperature rises quickly to 104 and continues steadily around that level whenever you think of the approach lng performance, then, like typhoid fever, declines gradually by lysis In the week or two (as It seems) after you have somehow stumbled through your first paragraph or line on fac ing the audience. Maybe It la on.'y the blood pressure, not the tempera ture, that goes up. I have never been In any condition to determine that point In my case. A good many victims have testi fied that the quinine treatment as suages or prevent stage fright, and more swear by quinine ns the sover eign remedy for examination Jitters Too often students preparing for examination resort to drugs which produce wakefulness or stimulate the cerebrum and other nerve centers. Every such drug we know has harm ful by-effect or depressing after effects, aside rom the ever present risk of addiction. Quinine In moder ate doses Is comparatively harmless. In act, It Is more or less tonic, tend ing to build up the strength of the red blood corpuscles. Quinine prevents or moderates stage fright and examination Jitters by Its gentle stimulation of Setschenow'a reflex Inhibitory center In the spinal cord. I'm sory about the name, hut I know of no simpler one. Trans lated Into plain language It means that quinine steadies reflex action or tends to control "nerves" or nervousness. Of course quinine la a cerebral stimulant, too, though not so power ful as the more dangerous drugs Ill advised students sometimes use when cramming for examinations, Where any prolonged mental and physical strain la to be undergone, one grain of quinine three times a day for a few weeks will tend to prevent exhaustion and support the system. In using quinine to prevent or moderate stage fright or examina tion Jitters the quinine may be tak en In tablet, pill, capsule, as you prefer, the dose being one grain three times a day, Just before or after meals. Either plain quinine or quinine sulphate or quinine blsul phate may be used the last Is some what more soluble And also more ex pensive. Begin taking the quinine perhaps two weeks before the ordeal and continue It up to zero hour. If It does no good at any rate It can do no harm. QUESTIONS AMI ANSWERS Asparagus Is there any truth In the saying that drinking the water In which asparagus has been cooked la harm to the kidneys? (Mrs. E. R.) Answer Asparagus and the water In which It Is cooked are harmless to the kidneys. Keiluetlon How can one reduce weight safely when fighting pernicious anemia? (Mrs. A. R. O.) Answer One would be foolish to try. The attending physician should prescribe and supervise the diet In the circumstances. I am glad to send any well person who needs to reduce Instructions. Inclose with your request a stamped envelope bearing your address. If you want a copy of booklet, "New Design for Dwindling." give full particulars about diet and general measures to build health while reducing, Inclose ten cent coin and mention booklet. Do not send a clipping or loose stamps. lodln Would two drops of lodln each day harm anyone that really needs It, Instead of one drop a day for month In each of the four seasons of the year? (Mrs. J. C. B.) Answer I refuse to testify on the ground hat It might tend to upset things again. Send stamped envel ope for Instructions for lodln Ra tion. (Copyright, 1038, John P. DlUe Co.) Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS THIS dispatch from London la in terestlng: "Lord Robert Cncnton-Stuart left for the United States today (Wednesday), reportedly to In vest the greater share of a sum reputed to be 1100.000.000, real ised from the sale of the vast holdings of his father, the Mar quis of Bute." THE sale of Lord Robert's holdings la aald to be the largest real es tate deal In British history. The property disposed of includes a large portion of the Cardiff (Wales) docks, tbe Cardiff shipping exchange, about 30,000 homes, 1,000 shops, 350 SA LOONS, several theatres and cinemas (British for movie theatres), big ag ricultural areas around the city parts of the town of Penarth and a number of neighboring villages. (Lord Robert's father, you see, was pretty well heeled). THE Interesting part of the story, of course, la the statement that he la coming over here to Invest the whole sum In the United States, . , There are pessimists who will say that ha la foolish that the United States la In a bad way: that the New Deal has about wrecked us; that our best days are over and that the prospecte for profitable Investment In thla counry are slim. to work and SAVING, thla country will go ahead In a way that will amaze the world. Lord Roberts Is SMART. If he's willing to wait a while for returns he'll never regret his Investment. Promoted j!eV $.'. ".-.'. :. . " Thla wvlter croakers. ISNT one of these HE New Deal's unsound theories (such as spending ourselves rich getting fat out of scarcity, working less and having more, trying to dl vide what Isn't produced, lifting our selves by our bootstraps, etc.) have hurt us. Trying to get something for nothing ALWAYS hurts. But they have only SLOWED US DOWN, They haven't taken away our future. Ed Note: Persons wishing to contmunlratf with Dr Brady should end tetter rilrerl to Dr. William Brady M D.. 263 El Camlno Beverly Hills. Calif. minded moment I made a wnger with young Mrs, Charles King Mallory. Jr. It was nominated In the bond that. In the event of my losing. I should design and present her with an even ing gown and now I can no longer evade the painful task of paying up. "Can you be persuaded to rep re nt mo In this matter? You see I don't know anything about dress making, but I know what I like, I want the gown to be of chartreuse crepe with a great .walloping doodad of some lvory: white material, and I want the white piped with black. How does one go about such things? Will you arrange It for me? Yours sincerely , , . Alexander Woollcott. 'P. S. Remember the black, piping. Without It the dress will be like an egg without salt." The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One ) Man About Manhattan 07 UMHU.E lUCKEH pentier. who looks aa trim as when he fought Drmpary." "It has been a poor month for the rough element. The Fuehrer has finally had to pull In his horns, and an entry known a Old Iron Pants tmi'tvl In th Orftfnn poll." (Detroit flawa bua if JameJ NEW YORK With the summer cruises on and the gypslM taking to the open road, being a reporter In the largest town In the world at the moment la large ly a matter or going through the morning mail. Adventur er, beach-combers, expatrlntea, lecturers, auth ors, artom and engineer all are departing for re mote hnvena . . well, almost all. So to th mall baaket: "After two weeks of Furl. I long for Spain. where you'd never guess there was a war, If you keep away from the barbed wire," writes J. H. Mnd don who once Mllrd around Ireland In an 18-foot canoe. "PurU la franc erary and people are bores, but the food continues excellent. Ye'.a-Tdiy 1 M- thr- Ah!t"-hie,1rei jwt, Rlrharl LeOailiruue, and elao Ueonjei Car ta a bold scrawl, flam Blake ad mit that the "smallest newspaper in the world is the Blmlnt Bugle DUbllshed in Blminl, Bahamas, and edited by Roderick H. Rollins. U'a 'i by 8S and there's usually a copy on display, with other foreign newspapers, In the West Point lounge of the Hotel Piccadilly, if you're interested." Joe Heldt of the Theater Oulld ambles n with a note from Eugene O'Neill: "Please emphatically deny that I have any Intentions of break lng with the guild or producing cycle (of Dlavs) myself. The report Is nonsense. My first two plays are already under contract to the Guild and I discussed plana for production of whole c;cto with Theresa HeJ burn and Lawrence Langner when they were out here, and since thn by letter. Deeply regret this rumor Guild has always been fine to me as a producer. Its members are my personal friends and my one feeling ta of grateful loyalty to the organlr atlon and absolute confidence In tt." Ing-lendlng program. But they con alder the program too small, too llke 1) to be long In starting. Before the program takes effect, they fear a cruel liquidation, fully as bad as that In the worst Hoover year. They curse the conservative budget balancers, like Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr.. and Chairman Jesse H. Jones of the R.F.C., who put off and pared down the spending pro gram. Yet they are powerless to do much more than curse. Meanwhile, Albert Kornfeld wan ders past thla observer's look-out with perhaps the most amusing letter of all. ... It Is a shriek In the night . , . for help. ... It seems Alexander Woollcott, "the talented busybody.' made a rash wager with a lady and lost. . . , His appeal, addrwrd to Voue. follow : "This lit ci) for help. In a weak- The very violence of emotion among these high officials offers the best hope that their fears are slightly hysterical. That the feara are there. cannot be questioned. Already, some public Indication of the feelings has been given in the Atlantic Cltv speech of Chairman Marrlner B. Eccles of the federal re serve board. Eccles solemnly warned that the spending program might prove too modest. And in dolrg so. he was only echoing the vlewa of WPA Administrator Harry R, Hop kins: Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace: Chairman William O. DouRlaa of the SEC: and the four leading economists. Leon Henderson of WPA, Mordecai Ereklel of Agricu ture. Isadore Lubln of the labor de partment, and Lauchlln Currle of the federal reserve board. Of late this group of men and cer tain powerful allies have been clam oring at the White House. They h ve demanded the removal of the tight-fisted Jesse Jones from control of lending. They have pleaded for a larger allocation to WPA at least a. 000 .000. 000 to be spent freely, as the old CWA leaf-raklng money was without means tests or required lo cal contribution. They have pro posed stll easier equipment loans to railroads and utilities. Some of them have even asked that anvone nitlm to undertake low ert housing be allowed 15 per cent ot free WPA labor. And others have gone so far as to suggest that the president propose a stlU larger spend ing program even before congress has approved the present one. The central argument of the gloomy spenders Is that the president should publicly accept the old compensatory spending theory. This theonj, first championed by Chairman Eccles, Is that, when private expenditure con tracts, government expenditure must take up the slack, contracting again as -private expenditure increased. Thus far, the president has not given in. But there Is another, and to a politician, equally Important aspect of the situation. The elections take place In November, as everyone knows. The New Deal strategists have been counting positively on a pre-election upturn. And now that the New Deal economists believe there will be no upturn for at least six montha, now that they predict a Hooverlan liquidation first, the strat egists are shaking in their shoes. (England, you will remember, had her New Deal about a dozen year ago, and It nearly bankrupted her. France, 15 years ago the richest and soundest country In Europe, has been fooling with a somethlng-for-nothlng New Deal, and she la nearly bank rupt now. England scrapped her New Deal, and la coming out of hei business troubles having nothing to worry about now but war. JUST give us time and we'll come out of our troubles. , After we've tried It long enough and have suffered . enough In the process, we'll discover that there is NO SUCH THING as something for nothing and that taking away the other fellow' wealth isn't a satis factory substitute for CREATING NEW WEALTH by the application of honest labor to our abundant raw materials. 1 Taking It away from the other fel low doesn't create any new pros perity. WHEN we finally quit monkeying with the unsound and long since discredited Idea of taking It away from the other fellow and get back L. 0. McLaren, general sales man gar of Shell Oil Company, hat been elected vice-president in charge of marketing. He It well known In the oil world and will direct Shell's marketing activities in the ten western states, Hawaii and British Columbia. In an announcement made today by 8. Bellther. president of Shell OH company, L. G." McLaren will become Its new vice -president in charge of marketing effective June 1. McLaren ascends to this Important position j from general sales manager, a post wmcn ne has occupied in au Fran cisco for the last three years. Starting In Seattle as a service station employee In 1921, McLaren's rise has been rapid. During this time he has served successively as sales man, local manager, district man ager, and division manager In cities of the Northwest and the Hawaiian islands. It Is expected that Mr. McLaren will visit this territory on an Inspec tion tour of the company's interests shortly after assuming his new du ties, according to C. V. 8tarbuck. local manager for the company here. McLaren Is 45 years of age and well known throughout the whole Pacific coast territory. Flight o' Time Medfurd and Jackson County history from the flies ol the Mall Tribune 10 and to years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY May 31. 1928. (It waa Thursday.) Col. Lindbergh, noted aviator, lost In flight near Long Beach at night, finally locatea beacon, and nearly crashed In landing. Pears felt for hours. "Southern Cross" In flight to Ha wall, S00 miles at sea. Prank Parrell heads GOP county committee. Road to Diamond Lake la open. Proat season for year over; peara well developed. Poot and air rescuers hunt for crew of lost Italian dlrutlble in Are. tic wastes. Highest prices In three years for farm truck. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 31, 1918. (It waa Friday.) German wedge appro chea the Marne. "Junior prom" to be held at Nat tonight, and It will be the biggest social event of the school year. Autos will call Saturday at homee for old clothing for Belgians. Mrs. E. H. Porter and children left this morning for Port worden. Wash, where Dr. Porter la stationed. O. D. Prazee and family have ar rived from Portland, where they have been living, and will make their home here. The cost of living In Great Britain on April 1, 1938, was approximately . 54 per cent above the level of Julyn lOtd mtnt. tVt "UlnrtM , , i . ....., WUU Gazette." Gen. Robert E. Lee, In the last year of the war between the states. declared himself In favor of a grad ual emancipation of the slaves. RAINY days don't scare Estelle Taylor v'ith rain-proof pill box hat having lacquered narcissus and lacquered veil. Workers on the federal writers- project believe that Capt. William Moore, born in Ulster county. Ireland. In 1726. waa the first white settler In North Carolina west of the Blue Ridge I mountains. V v V Chevrolet JINGLES When we lose on a used car trade, It's a cinch that SOMEONE has MADE, Our loss must always be someone's gain, It's a question how long we stand tbe strain. For the volume of new car sales we need, We must take in cars of all makes and breed. Now if we lose on trades, I can PROVE we do, If you want to WIN it 's just up to YOU! Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside service Oept S2 No Riverside Fsed Cat Lot Riverside al tl A Goodyear's Safety Show Wednesday to Feature Safe Tube An unusual treat la In store to morrow for local residents who axe Interested in highway safety, when they will have an opportunity to wltneaa Just how a tire reacts when It blows out. The demonstration will occur dur ing a safety show sponsored by the Medford service station, local Good year dealer, which will take place at 1 p.m. Wednesday, June 1, at South Riverside and 14tb street. During the course of the show, to which city officials and others Interested In reduction of highway accidents have been Invited, a tire equipped with a regular tube will be blown out by use of dynamtte. Thla demonstration will be made at slow speed, in order that spectators may see for themselves Just what happens to a tire when It suddenly loses all Its air. Another part of the safety show win ieature the blowout of a tire at high speed, but on this occasion the tire will be equipped with a i Ocodyear Llfe-Quard, a new safety achievement which turns a tire fail ure Into a slow leak. The UfeQuard, which takes the p-'ece of the conven tional tube, has been hailed by po lice and fire officials, and heads of safety organizations throughout the united States, as one of the most remarkable contributions to highway wifety In recent year. In reality, the LlfeOuard consists of an inner tire Inside an outer tube, both being joined at the base. Air paaes from the inner tire i which is built up of fabric pllesl to the outer tube through a single tiny vent. When a tire failure occurs, air escapes from the outer tube in stantly, but can escape from the In ner tire only through the single tiny vent. This means that In event of failure, the tire drops down to ride on the Inner tire, allowing the driver to bring the car to a safe stop. Sandrlngham palace, a favorite resi dence of British rayolty. was pur chawi tn IRM by the Prince of Wl. altera ard Edward VII. for lUOO.OOO. A Profitable Start Together with their savings invested here! Saving for the future It going to be fun. They're young, and in a few yean, while they can still enjoy It to the fullest, their sav ings plus earnings will giva them money for special va cations, will give them se curity against the world. HOW TO GET MORE FROM SAVINGS To get rwl profit from savings, look for the jafest and most convenient way to invest for liberal return. A strong record of safety stands behind our association ... the security behind your investment dollar is tlutyt the highest type. An account with one of our convenient savings plins will start you to financial happiness now. Jackson County Federal Savings & Loan Association 126 East Main "1