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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1940)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1940. MedfordWTeibune uKvrfon Soothero Orsoa ! tb Malt Trlbun." Dully Etrrpt Baturday. Publithed by HBDPORD PRINTING CO. II-IT-3 North Fir St. Fhons Tl. ROBKRT W, RITHL, Editor. RNEBT R- ailSTHAP. Mnfr. AO InilapcnAant Nwipipr. Brit rod MOondcIiB mattnr at M"1 ford, Ortgoft. undtr Act of March I. 1171. 0UQSCRIKTION BAT KB By Vsll I ' Advance: DMy nt flurdajr on yr . . . . . (.0 Daily and Sunday-ill months... 160 Dtltv and Sunday thr monlhl. 1. 00 Dally and Sunday dm month .. T y C.trrla,- In Ad vanr Mad ford. Ah tandt Cantral Point, Jarkaonvlll, Q'.ttJ HMU Rogus Rlvar, Fbosnli. Talnt. and on motor routei: Dally and Sutirtay on year fJ.Oo Dally and Sunday on month.. .71 All lamia caah In advance Official Paper of the illy of Medforif. Olflclal Vavr of Jiirknon County. M KM II Kit OF THK ARnOCI A I T.l I'KIHS Receiving Full L,.ert Wire Service. The Aaa nclated Prtaa Ik aic'ualvely entitled to the ua for publication of all ntwi dtapatchea credited to It or other wtaa crndlted to ttiH paper, and alao to the local nnwi publlphd herein, All rlKhta for publication of apaelal dlipatehta herein are alao reaerved. MEMBER OF t'NITED PKE8S MGUBER CP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising KepraaentaMvea WK3T-HOLLJDAY COMPANY. INC. Offloea in New York, Chlcag-i. Del rot t, San Franr-laco, Los Angelea, Beati le. Portland, St. Lou I a, Atlanta, Vancouver, n r Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Terry. "Commonsense, Inc." of Ore gon plans a vote on repeal of the Knox Liquor control low. There comes the vagrant thought It should be Commonsense, Ltd. . A notion originating In Seattle, Wash., proposes to give two votes to property owners, and one vote to all others. As only 43 per cent of the voters are able to find the strength to vote once at elections, It is feared doing it twice on the same day would be too much, and cause over-exertion. Russia's conduct of the in vasion of Finland Is pronounced by the experts, the "most com plete military failure in history." At times it looks like the commander-in-chief of the army was appointed to the post because he was for Josef Stalin, before he was named dictator. ... The woods will soon be full of candidates, with the candidates full of woulds, It was so cold yes. several male members of the No-Hat brigade, who haven't worn one for months, accidentally picked up the nicest looking hat in sight and several were lucky enough to get one that fit. . "Probably the worst mistake Cook made after getting the ap pointment as WPA roads super intendent was that he did not im mediately change his registra tion to democratic." (Oregon City Enterprise) Political spanking noted. ... A wanderer went through on his uppers the first of the week. He said It was a slow horse in Florida and not Herbert Hoover who made him what he was to day. ... DOUBTING THOMAS (Chiloquin Review) "President Roosevelt' little plate-aide chat the other eve ning at the Jackson day dinner In WnshlitRton may have been a clever political move, and the speech may have been funny, but that's about all you can say about It." e e Seventeen dupes, charged with seditious conspiracy, car ried on their plans for devilment, behind the noble sounding title of "Christlun Front." The theme nontf of the outfit was "Reign Glory We Are Here to See It So!" Flies never flew to mo lasses nny faster than dema gogues hied to this slogan and Fong. It's an old trick with hell raisers, like singing "America" to drown out the sound of crash ing glass, when the window of a courthouse vault was whammed with a monkey-wrench. YE SILVER LINING "With new buggies no longer en the market it's a serious busi ness these days when such a horse-drawn vehicle goes into the ditch. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver had the now rare experience of turning over in a buggy the other day. Neither was .seriously injured and although the vehicle was pretty badly warped about, they feel that they came out of the scntpc most fortunately. The best thing about the mishap, Mr. Oliver says, is that he has not been pestered by a lot of buggy salesmen." (Crano (Mo.) Chron icle). Princesses Vlfcit London, Jim. 16. (V) Prin cesses Elizabeth and Margaret Hose returned to Buckingham palace today for the first time since before the war. They came here from Sandringham castle With their father and mother, King George and Quoen Klua-beth. fOILISHllVy AjsVUTIM Comedy or Tragedy? ONE hardly knows whether to laugh or cry over this alleged terrorist plot in New York City. It IS funny, the idea of 17 would-be Nazis over throwing the government and establishing a Feuhrer dictatorship. One regrets Gilbert and Sullivan aren't alive so they could set it to music, a perfect theme for a great "Americana" opera bouffe. One is even disposed to agree with Mayor La Guardia, who doesn't think Uncle Sam "is in much danger from 17 guys like these" had they ever started anything, one squad of New 'York police would have had them all in Mattewan before sunset. And YET, There is another side to it. "THE "other side" comes under the general head of "seeing things under the bed," BUT Finding the "things" are really there, live, able bodied men, with bombs and guns in their hands! And with a man like J. Edgar Hoover confirming a grim tableaux like that, one can't exactly LAUGH it off. IT IS ridiculous, these poor misguided "nuts" sing ing, "Reign glory, we are here to see it so !" as they are led off to their detention cells, while their rela tives weep and wail. But it is also disturbing, Not as a disease that threatens immediate injury, but a symptom that threatens future harm. For while Father Couglin now roundly denounces the "Christian Front" and officials of that strange cult disown and discredit this "New York branch," the fact remains that this cockeyed "conspiracy," thus nipped in the bud, is the direct result of the sort of in cendiary propaganda that his been dished out from the pulpit of the "Little Flower," and other head quarters for potential U. S. Fascists, these many months, as they have viewed with alarm the Com munist and the Jewish menace, that if not resisted would soon be taking over the government of the United States, etc., etc., etc ! ! MINE out of ten American citizens ar j not influ- enced by such demagogic nonsense, however in flammatory, they might even like to listen to it, with that amused scepticism that is accorded the circus sideshow "barker" and when the storm is over, let the verbal deluge drain off their various and sundry consciousnesses like water off a duck's back. BUT, the tenth man is, and these accused ter rorists in New York are composed of TENTH men, misguided fanatics and crackpots, convinced they are consecrated in a holy cause of national redemption, and willing to die in the effort. VES, the spectacle is a familiar one, particularly to those who were residents of Jackson county six or seven years ago and saw what similar persistent and accumulative agitation resulted in, in this section of the state. The leaders of that "civil uprising" knew better; so did nine out of ten of the citizens hereabouts. But the TENTH man and woman DIDN'T! And, it was that tenth man, that 10 per cent so shamelessly misled and misguided, that brought this part of the' state to the very verge of open insurrection. . . . . . fJNDOUBTEDLY had the G-men not acted when they did, there would have been bloodshed in New York or Washington as entirely needless as was the case in Southern Oregon. And that brings one to the most serious feature of the entire affair, the difficulty in combatting what is a distinct national menace, particularly in war time, or other periods of emotional strain and stress. No one wishes to curtail the constitutional right of free speech, and yet that right really ceases when overt acts of violence are the direct result of it. ' The great trouble IS, in nine cases out of ten, the direct connection between what is said and what is done, the free speech and the overt act, can't be proved, UNTIL IT IS TOO LATE! Scandinavia Next? N 0 DOUBT many Americans are surprised that Soviet luissia should be shaking same at Scandinavia. If press reports are cor rect the Soviet Bear has all he can do to handle little Finland without branching out further to the north and west. But such a threat will not surprise the people of Norway and Sweden. Only a few days after the out break of the present war, 'a Swedish business man visited Medford, and said everyone in Scandinavia was scared over the Russian menace fearing Stalin would take over the forests, minerals and warm ports of the peninsula after he had captured Finland. "Oh, yes," said he, Sweden would resist, but what could a few millions do against 200 millions, etc., etc! The Swedish visitor was convinced Russia would swallow little Finland in a couple of weeks. So while this Russian threat can come as no sur prise to the Scandinavians, the successful resistance of Finland must be at least if our Swedish inform ant gave the correct view of public opinion in his native land. So to a man up a tree it would appear that what little Finland can do. Sweden and Norway, with allied assistance, can do even better. Hotels Now Fair Portland, Jan. 18. (41 The central labor council removed 11 Portland hotels from Its "tin I fair list" and announced a pro I tram of cooperation with unions ! in a new orgitnmitlon campaign. I Um Kail Tribune want ad. raistner its mailed fist and U. S. Seen Market Brussels, Jan. 10. ( .TV-Former Premier Paul Van Zr. land today urged small Belgian man ufacturers to sock new markets :n the United States where, he jsHul, there are "immense pussi jbilities of development." Personal Health Service By William Signed lettcra pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dUease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self, addressed envelope If enclosed. Letters should be brief and written la Ink. Owing to the large numbers of letters re eel red only a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to but ructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. PLEASE EXCUSE In a talk about sore mouth recently I cited a report on studies of "electrogalvanic phe nomena of the oral cavity caused by dissimilar metallic restorations", which the investi gators, Everett S. Lain, M. D. and G. Sherrill Caughron, D. D. S. presented in the Journal of the American Dental Associ ation. Then later, evidently assum ing, like Hitler, that the world could take it, I perpetrated another one, namely, bra dycardia but it seemed I was still rath er timid about it, for I took pains to ex plain at once that bradycar d 1 a means slow heart. Nothing hap pened. Well, well, I decided, I have my readers intimidated at last. Now let's go. And the very next day I hauled off and handed them an article with a title calculated to appall nearly everybody: "The Ubiquitous Pneumococcus". But not quite everybody. A "small, harmless well-meaning grandmother" who, judging from letters I have received from her now and again, is right up on her toes, inquires whether I have ever suffered from "electrogalvanic phenome na of the oral cavity" and fears she would if she even at tempted to "mouth" the leng thy and awful diseases and re medics I am expounding these days. Why not, she adds, com pletely disarming me, why not cut down the jaw breakers to such simple terms as Dr. Brady (Ol- Doc to you, Grandma) has popularized to express so much to ordinary folk such as "cri" and "vite"? A swift uppercut that catches me off balance with my neck out does more good than all the bewindering passes, and I thank Grandma E. E. U. for it and promise to give her letter a preferred place In my scrap book. Is my face red? Indeed, if the punishment fitted the crime that wouldn't be all. In extenuation for the first offense, I was quoting the title of the article (for the benefit of the minority of readers who generally want to know the source). But 'that makes the second and third offenses all the more flagrant, doesn't it? Very well, I'll go quietly, only THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNER Released by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc. Washington, Jan. 16. Hol land and Belgium are again hastily mobilizing, but they are not the only neutral, nations now in danger of sudden Ger man invasion. Huge concentra tions of German troops are re ported on the Dutch and upper Belgian borders, from Cleves to Aix La Chnpelle, but there is also authoritative word of heavy troop movements into Slovakia and the tip of German Poland, on the northern Hun garian frontier. Opinion In ihf department Is hnrp1y divided on (he mpnnlii of tliesr new alna. One faction utrucs that the threat to Hungary is ft feint, since o few mechaniwd unit have accompanied the Infantry that the Germans hardly tvem ready to trike to the "nstwnrd. Another fac tion maintain that the threat to the Nrtticrlnnd and Belgium is the feint, and that Hitler Is determined to mop up Hungary and Rumania while the' RuMtann are- preoccupied in Finland. And still a third faction Is In clined to think the signs ar mean tncleas, sine slins of the same fort have proved deceptive twice before within 12 month.. In November, the present pattern ws almost exactly duplicated. Troop concentrations were observed in the j-ame places. The Hungarians were -tvretly requested to grant German troops free pas ace for an attack on Rumania, and flatly refused The Belgians were asked to promise neu trality In the event of an attack on Holland, tints isolating the Hutch from allied aid except by sea. They als refuw.1. prelum shit after King Leopold's urpile dash to The Hatue by night, to confer with Queen Will helmnl. Tiie German troops did not move. Nevertheless, the escape was nar row. The beit substantiated story oes that Hitler. UNed on by such civilian hotheads at Hit slick Von Brady, M. D. THE $6.50 WORDS please believe there was no malice aforethought in these divertisements. They may even keep many readers more or less interested who would oth erwise pass this column up. For instance, I was agreeably in flated by a letter from a high school girl who said the Eng lish composition class used my column in daily class work but somewhat flabbergasted to learn that it was a rare day when the class could not find one or more errors to criticise. Painful tho it be to affirm the fact, it is as true as ever, that the less a doctor knows about the subject the more pon derous and imposing terms he uses in referring to it, and vice versa. QUESTIONS & ANSWERS Wliat to Eat and Why Do I understand you scoff about diet as an aid In maintaining health or treating disease? You are bo fa cetious and sarcastic that one can scarcely tell Just what you are driv ing at sometimes. And don't you think we'd be aa profoundly Im pressed by your erudition if you used simple English Instead of the resounding terms you contrive to sprinkle thru your articles? (S.A.C.) Ans. Ma'am, you have no Idea. It might be effective to cite a spe cific Instance, next time I offend you, and suggest the simpler Eng lish you think would convey the Idea. I have a 90-page guide to right eating entitled "Feeders Di gest". For copy send 25 cents coin and 1 cent stamped envelope bear ing your address. Aluminum Kitchen Ware I make enough cereal for two feedings for my baby, and let It stand all day In the aluminum double boiler In which It was cooked, In the refrigerator. Some say this Is harmful. (Mrs. A.M.) Ans. It Is all right. Aluminum ware la as sanitary or healthful as any other dish for cooking or keep ing any kind of food In. Have used It In our kitchen for many years. We don't take the propaganda of obscura "apeclallsts" seriously. Club Foot Tour lodln ration has helped me more than the nine doctora I had consulted for chronic sinus trouble. . . . Youngest brother contemplates marrying Into a family In which club foot seems to run In cycles. (Mrs. M. L. D.) Ans. Club foot la not hereditary. It Is merely a congenital defect or delay In development of the foot that Is, development ceases or Is retarded before It Is complete. No known cause. It may occur - In any family. Every Infant Is club-footed a month or two before birth. (Protected by John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William riradv, M. D., 2155 El Camplno, Beverly Hills. Calif. Rlbbentrop, believed that tha war deadlock must be broken somewhere. He Is supposed to have gone so far as to prepare the necessary army orders, and it Is known that on November 18, emergency rations were Iwiied to the German divisions chos en to lead the Invasion of Holland. But after a sharp argument with his generals. Hitler changed his mind and tore the orders up. The escape was also narrow last January, even before the Invasion of Prague. At that time, aa In No vember, Hitler's diplomats pressed , the Belgians for a promise of neu trality if Holland was invaded. More over, the Belgians, doubting the Eng lish and French readiness to aid them, then seemed almost ready to give In. For a fortnight, the foreign offices and bourses of the world shivered with secret apprehension (for this crisis was not much men tioned In the pre). A blitzkrieg against Holland was seriously feared until the Belgians would not give the desired promise. Now the situation Is seriously com plicated for the Germane, both be cause Belgium Is thought much more likely to hold by her previous stand, and because Italy and Turkey are both Intimately Interested In the Balkan situation. Wherever the at tack comes, If It does come, the war will probably spread far beyond the country actually Invaded. On the whole. It seems most prob Able thst If there Is an attack It will be against Holland. Geography Is Important here. Holland Is a rough parallelogram, with the big corner of the North sea almost nipped off between the mouths, of the Rhine and the end of the Zulder Zee. This corner la the citadel of Hollaed, containing meet of the countT'e Industry, the si most Important cities, and the potential air bases against England which are the real Herman objectives. The Dutc.h war plan Is to retire Into the citadel corner, opening the dykes to flood the neck of Isnd between the Zulder Zee and the Slhlne mouths. The time for an auark on Holland is very short, therefore, since the brief European winter Is passing, and a thsw Is at hand. The attack In Uie east Is even more problematical. The nusaians would be expected to Join In It. Since the Russians want Bessarabia and Bessarabia wilt soon be a sea ol mud. the time Is alao short In the a. Moreover. It seema unlikely that the Oenvanti wru!d attempt such an at lack without bringing up their me chanised forces, even though tempted by ine chance to grab more of the BiUkans than thetr Rviselan allies will , ...1 .v. ... . i,.sie " j lih fuesMra. In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS TTODAY'S most startling (NOT most important) news: -Seventeen members of an or ganization calling Itself the "Christian Front" are arrested in New York by the Federal Bu reau of Investigation (G-men) and charged with plotting to overthrow the government of the United States and replace it with a dictatorship. THE DAY was set for some where around January 20. 1 TTHIS Is significant: The revolution was to be brought about by seizure of com munications (telephone, tele graph, radio), transportation sys tems (railroads, bus lines, etc.), customs and post offices. Terror was to be inspired by the assassi nation of members of congress, The plan was that when the people of the United States re covered from the shock of sur prise and fear they would find the machinery of everyday liv ing in the hands of the revolu tionists. t IT was a crackpot idea, of 1 course; and it WOULDN'T have worked here. We have seen it work in Italy in Germany, in Spain, etc., but the American people are a dif ferent breed of cats. Instead of tamely " submitting to dictator ship when they found their con gressmen murdered, their trans portation and communications systems seized and their cus toms and post offices in the hands of the conspirators, they would have come out from under the shock FIGHTING MAD. The would-be revolutionists wouldn't have lasted long. gUT DON'T FORGET THIS: the effort should ever be made to bring fascism or com munism or any other of the nu merous "isms" to America, it will be by some such scheme as this one said to have been un masked in New York. It won't be BY THE BALLOT t DELGIUM and Holland are vir " tually mobilized, with a mil lion troops along the German border. All leaves for British soldiers on the western front have been cancelled. New ru mors are out that Hitler is plan ning to strike at Britain and France through the relatively unprotected low countries. This is the logic of the situa tion: If you wanted to get some where and the shortest road was barred by a high fence, you'd try to get AROUND THE END. Belgium and Holland are at one end of the Maginot line fence. AT THE National Capitol WITH Job W. Kelly (Continued from Parfe One ) gressman Mott stresses the im portance of funds to build, not merely survey, the Albany Waldport line. Representative Pierce's stunt is to ask for con struction and not a survey for The Dalles to Bend and enough money to build the line from LaGrande to Pendleton. In congressional halls there is an unconfirmed report that Administrator Raver agreed to accept the estimates of the di rector of the budget. The man from Bonneville will be ques tioned on this and if he con firms the rumor then he will be told, by certain representa tives, he should abide by his agreement and not endeavor to ask congress to exceed the sum. . THERE Is S6000 available for reg istered architects (they must be cltlsens) in Oregon and Washing ton who wish to submit designs for a 300.000 federal building at Taco mi, Wash. Author of the winning design win receive S3000 and will be employed as consultant during the preparation of working draw ings and specifications, with anoth er M0OO. pride to a resolution of the Fed eral Parm Bureau in which that or ganlratlon approved of the reciprocal trade agreements In principle. This CONSTIPATION NEEDS ATTENTION IN YOUNG AND OLD Fvn "temporary" constipation Is nothing to trifle with. Why delav when Stuart's Laxatlre Compound helps brlnu rich quick welcome re lief without habit-formlng or bad after-effect? Ptusrt's i wonderful for all agesreally works safelv for adults, yet gentl enough for child ren. Doa?e actually reduces as It helps Tenulsm.' To feel bright, keep bowels rtuht. Try Stuart's Lxa- : me compound rtht away for It safe, gentle results. At all dru i store 35c and 0c under maker a money -back (uanuitea. was adopted after Secretary of Agri culture We'.Uoe addressed the con vention of the farm bureau. But what the administration has not mentioned l a eecond set of reso lutions adopted by the Federal Farm Bureau In which the organlsaUon voiced opposition to any trade agree ment with any South American country or any belligerent. In elim inating belligerents and South Amer ica the Hat of countries with which a treaty --an be made Is reduced to eero. National Orange is already on rec ord against such treaties, and with the second resolution of Federal Farm Bureau this unites the two great agricultural groups In opposi tion to the trade policy, over which a legislative battle will rage for sev eral months. Practically every western member, new dealer or otherwise, Is agBtnst the treaty policy. More new dealers (some 100 percenters) are breaking away from President Roosevelt on this Issue than on the famed effort to pack the supreme court. HOUSE committee Investigating KLRB haa discovered that the female of the species Is more deadly than the male. Women with college education, admitted to the bar (some were appointed before they were even admitted, are acting as review officers for the board. Their Job haa been to study the testimony before examiners and then boil down the pros and cons for the board to use In making a decision. The commit tee found these women, obsessed with a desire to aid workers and punish employers, supplied "facts" from their own sources when they could not find enough In the re ports of the examiners. When some of these women made their sum mary for the board there was nothing for the board to do on the briefs presented but to give the short end to the man who furnished the payroll. Mr. Roosevelt wants to clean up the board, but to save face, will kick the chairman upstairs to a fed eral Judgeship. NLRB haa been death to "company unions" yet has. In ef fect, maintained a company union among Its own employes. TOP HONOR ROLL Southern Oregon College of Education, Ashland, January 16. (Spl) Medford students top ped the honor roll for the fall quarter at the Southern Oregon College of Education. Six of the 26 students who made a grade point, average of 3.5 or better are residents of Medford They are Flora Miller, Delroy Ryn ning, Orva Stevens, Jeanette Thatcher, Bertha Wertz, and Valeria Whitney. Others of this classification are Don Barnes, Mary Jean Barnes, Norman Car others, Roy Carothers, of Phoe nix: Aileen Brown and Leola Lee of Grants Pass; Robert Dus enberry of Cottage Grove; Anna Belle Jacobs of Bandon; Mar gp.ret Lininger, Marjorie Mc- Nair, Leslie. Segsworth, Susan Sikes, and Helen Westfall of Ashland; Shirley Massie of Cave Junction; Duain Monroe of Klamath Falls; Marie McLaren and Mariece McLaren of Rogue River, and Florence Vail of Springfield. Students earning an average grade of B or better include Leland Ammerman of Rogue River; George Bibby, James Curtis, Doreen DeLisle, Mar jorie Freeman, Escoe Fuller, Frances Longley, Grace Renze ma, Flora Stokoe, Charles Stur gill, Helen Thomas, Warren Thompson, Gaylord Vestal, Jean Willard, Shirley Willard and Janet Young of Ashland; Fran ces Clark, Kenneth . Dawson, Hazel Dressier, Agnes Dunford, Lela Henderson, Kazuo Maru yama, Woody Mason, Elva Mc Kinnis, Cherokee Seiler, Dor othy Smith, Muriel Stocks, and Virginia Stout of Medford; Ancil Gunter of Jacksonville; Thelma Messenger of Gold Hill; Frank Ralston of Rogue River. FSCC To Purchase Lake Labish Onions Salem. Jan. 16. W The surplus commodities corporation will buy 78 carloads of onions from the Lake Labish district north of here, M. J, Robb, pur chasing agent, said last night. The corporation announced it would purchase 150 carloads in Oregon. No. 1 grade onions will bring 55c a hundred pounds. Buy GIL The ECONOMY Gasoline Used in the GILMORE-YOSEMITE ECONOMY RUN -at- RAY KLEPPE SERVICE STATION Jacksonville Highway and Lozier Lane Flight 0' Time Medford and Jackson County History from .the files or the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years to. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January 16, 1930 (It was Thursday) Warm rain melts snow fflat and flood is threatened in Rogua River valley. Senator McNary wires some thing will be done at next ses sion of congress about Crescent City harbor. Seven persons killed in coun ty past year by car accidents, coroner reports. Walfpr T.everette rjlans movl theater at Yreka, Cal., to cost $70,000. Spring dresses will hide knees, fashion decrees. Pool to be formed to sell val ley turkeys in Boston at 30 cents per pound. A number of horses reported starving in snow covered fields between this city and Jackson ville. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January 16, 1920 4 (It was Friday) League of Nations is estab lished at Paris meeting and "general regrets" America not represented. Jackson schools get second place in state wide thrift con test. British see disaster to Europe unless Russian advance is stop ped. Bill introduced in legislature to increase salaries of all Jack son county officers. Deposits in Ashland banks show substantial increases. '' Sugar shortage hits city, and price to be raised to 19 cents per pound. COAST BANK DEPOSITS EXCEED ALL RECORDS San Francisco, Jan. 16. (P) Pacific coast bank deposits towered high above all preced ing records right after the start of the year, federal reserve bank records indicated today. Calculations pointed to a $6, 387,000,000 total on deposit in the seven Pacific slope states. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads Is 1:30 p. m. CREAM!" says the majority! This "DOUBLE-RICH" whiskey is the largest selling straight Bourbon whiskey in the world. PT. 9()fi QT. $1.70 I BOTTTTD ATTHF OfSTIllfoy do proof I ortLtorjsf I SCNSNUV OlSTOiSUTOeTVINC 1 mww ro. n M0EE