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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1940)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, SUNDAY. JUNE 9. 1940. MESFORDvdTBIBUNS I Um MaU TrltaM." IMly Kir HalKfriav. MKuruMU PRINTING CO. U-t13 North rir 1L Phwi II. rttiHbHT W KliHU CJIlor. ' IINMT R U1UTHAP. Wnatr. A lndpn1Dt NwifMpr. ford, Or.foa. mn.r Act mt Hareh I. 1411 MUHWJRIHTION RATKS By MUI la AitiinMi Oaliy and una j n yr ....$ Dlij and undy an moatha. 1 t Osliy and Sunday tbraa moatha. I Dally and Sunday month... Ti By CarMor la Advaaco ftlodfof d. Aah land. Oantral Point, Jar aonn villa. 0ld HllL Bua ftivar. phoaala, TaiooL nd an motor rouiaa: Daily and unrty oa yoar t. Dally mod Sunday on month... .11 Ail tirmi ua.h is advaoca. Offlrlnl rapr of th City mt Met, fas! . orrirtal Paper mt JarbjMMi Cmumtj. MfcMKMt Of 1HB ASMM lArrii fHMa Hvcmius run twnn wtira avrvir Tna AaaAciaiad Prs la tsclualaiy ntitlad to lha um for publication af H aowa ditpatehM traditod ta it w other rlaa orO'lttad la thia papar. and alaa (a taa local nawa publlahad harala. All rlghta Tor publication of apial 4tipatohaa harala ara alao raaarvad. HEUBKR OP UNITED PHK8S HSUHEK OP AUDIT BURKAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adrartlalnf RaproaontattTaa WBSTHOLMDAV COM PA NT. ma Offiaoa la Naw York. Chicago, Datrolt, Baa Pranclaca. l-o Angalaa Soattla. for Man. St Uui. Atlanta, Vanoouar ?Ee Ye Smudge Pot Br ARTHCB PERRY Despite the war in Europe, and hysterica throughout this land, the meadow-larks still ing: "Everything's all right! Everything'! all right!" June brides are quite plenti ful hereabouts, and were never prettier, as they are every June. Haying Is the order of the day in the rural areas, and the vounaer farmers are coming to town in the evenings, looking for hay-hands, and dressed up Ilk they were going to make a social call. An aunt from Klamath Is visiting the Jno. Wilkinson boy Don, who alms to be a second A bell was put on the Elks' tom-cat Wed. so the birds would know ha was sneaking ud on them. The bell remained around his neck, all of two minutes. E. Ulrlch, the' Prospect mt. wm. towned Frl. coming down to trade and eat lunch with a soup & sing group. During the past week, the French used an overgrown mud hole to stop the nazi tanks, as effectively as a bunch of steers on Crater Lake Hgwy near Point. Due to not being as handy with a solf stick as a screw driver, H. Flewher the demon haker was vanaulshed by G Harrington. The loser was de feated but not disgraced Jno. Ntedermeyer, a promis ing young man, has announced ha will be liable for a shivaree in the fall. Vegetation of all kinds Is growing like the dickens. In cluding the weeds, that never get any hoeing, harrowing, cul tivating, pruning, or watering, but get there Just the same. Mussolini of Italy is so cord ially hated in these parts, if he came to town, the CofC. would throw pears at him, In stead of giving him a box, along with the keys to the city. Winning candidates were not ified last week officially they had been elected, which the ma- " lorilv already knew. With so many rumors in circulation, it is Just as well to play safe. The Softball season opened Tues. eve with a parade, dur ing which the athletes were eclipsed by two drum corps, and a bevy of majorettes. On the field of action all did noble, and rushed up to get acquaint- Are We Too Soft? A FEW days ago we wrote an editorial entitled, i wo o-pttino- anttl". lfeiilini? with the matter 4 11V r SjVUHUfj ewv w C7 of enlistments in the National Guard. Wo finrl enmo of nnr readers didn't like it Others did. This is a common experience in this business, so calls for no particular comment. But the nature of some of the criticisms, only one being signed and that not for publication, IS import ant, and does deserve comment IN fact in view of the announcement in yesterday's Oregonian, that Dorothy Thompson has already declared war on Nazi Germany, we feel certain the spirit the above query and current answers to it repre sent, are destined to become more and more import ant, as time goes on. For, if this country is going to get into the war F.VF.NITTIALLY. and we erant we are getting nearer and nearer to it every day, and if, as Arthur Lippmann nas maintained, we nave during the past quarter century of peace, become soft n, o r,ni;nn thon this ia a fart, that is coiner to be of aO C tJU.IUi'i .w.. v o SUPREME importance when the call to arms, finally sounds. For if we DO get into this war, there will have to be some fighting done, and needless to say, a nation gone soft isn't either inclined to fight, or if compelled to do so, isn't very effective at it SO we repeat, these criticisms of the editorial in question, we believe, ARE important, for there is no reason to believe the people of this community feel any differently than the people of other communities in this country. In fact there being practically no foreign element here, it seems reasonable to assume, that the disposi tion to defend and uphold (if need be, by force) American institutions and the American "way of life",' is stronger in Southern Oregon than in most parts of the state, or country. Yet if these anonymous criticisms are at all typical of this community as a whole, there are many at least of our fellow countrymen hereabouts, who not only reeard the theme of that editorial as "war monger- ing, but see, or tnmK iney see, a i. r. iuuik conspiracy to get this country invoivea in biiuuici European holocaust, and if this is done, "the real simon-pure, 100 Americans will and should refuse to fight!" "Why send our boys overseas to ba slaughtered to help the International bankers, and put a prop under the decadent nobility of England and Francel Yes, we think a reaction of that sort IS important For the editorial in question did not advocate America entering the war (in fact this paper opposes it, on the ground we can MORE effectively aid the cause of democracy, by rushing materials, rather than men, to Europe) but did advocate as a part of a pre paredness program, the bringing of our National Guard up to normal strength, and deplored the fact that in spite of two weeks of appeal and publicity, there had been but one to volunteer for such service. NOW that seems to this department a perfectly reasonable and even orthodox position to take in view of the world situation at the present mo ment Far from wanting war, we are convinced the stronger we become,- the more likelihood there will be of keeping out of it BUT we certainly won't be able to keep out of it, if not only Germany but Japan become convinced that this country is so strongly pacifist, the popular fnl,'nrr oo-oinot war an tviripsnrparl and deeD. that '"""S ... r; - .' ... nothing but actual armed invasion from abroad will ever get us into it (If that were trie case now long would it be before the Fifth column had Mexico, and Nippon the Dutch Last Indies!) And again if these reactions above mentioned are at all representative of American opinion, isn't it reasonable to fear that such a view will become estab lished in foreign lands, and as far as that goes, be justified? SO we believe this is a matter of considerable im portance, considering the state of the world at the present writing. And a serious effort should be made to find out what public opinion really is, and particularly the opinion of youth, regarding war. For needless to say if there should be war, it would be youth, not bald-headed editors, or venerable members of the D. A. R. who would have to do the fighting and the dying in it. (And incidentally let us grant u . . ...1,., l.itA ,1a tl,n finrMinrr on1 oiirmlv thp ana rusnea up iu acl i4o'ii,-iniu?c v nu uutc .yj vhj uit ijt, n b.., ,'i'jr",f . ed with the pitcher, every time ! f jK,ters j case 0f war should have the most to Say anything happened. ,,, ; n . . . i i e Idle rumors nave arm uv i busiest the past week, since the j TJINALLY we can think of no better way to close "Great Grand Jury" planned to f tn5s M,UiecL than to OUOte Mr. Archibald MaC- T olli i;ii.!ii-!nn nf nmirrrefia nnil nnet. who when 1 1 1 1 Ill'l ... ..... v. v..p,..-w - - - I - -. ' - called upon to comment, upon the fact that 1500 undergraduates of ale, signed a petition urging tnis country to keep out of the European war, and a sim ilar tmtitimi at Harvard, less trenerouslv siirned. which expressed distaste for serving in the armed forces of this country, expressed hiniselt as oeiow. He started out by commenting on the first worid war literature, decrying war, and upon which our present American youth were brought up: they ara nevertheless words that have born bitter and dangerous fruits. "Their effect has been to immunize the young genera tion against any attempt in its own country by its own leaders to foment a war by waving moral flags and rhetorical phrases. But they have left it defenseless before an aggressor ready to force war upon us. Above all. they have left it defenseless against an aggressor whose cynicism, bru tality, and whose stated intention to enslave present the issue of the future in moral terms. 'The post-war writers who educated a generation to suspect the tags, the slogans, and 'even the words,' left that generation defenseless before an aggressor whose whole strength consists in destroying respect of law, respect of morality, respect for the Word. "I am not undertaking to Judge these writers. I hava no right to Judge them, and if I did my hands would be tied because I felt as they did and wrote, so far as I waa able, as they were writing. What I do undertake to main tain is that what they wrote, however noble it may have been as literature, however true as a summary of experi ence, was disastrous as education for a generation which would be obliged to face the threat of fascism in its adult . ''"What I maintain further is thist That unless wa fgmln In this democracy the conviction that Ihera are final things for which democracy will fight unless wa i re cover faith in the expression of these things in words we can leave our planes unbuilt and our battleships on paper, for we shall not need them." Be awUr dlsllsad tbe notton of radical ui RTtalon at ttus asMtoa. but the tnoucht of radical raTUion la the arn&u. followed by a lone oonfaranc structls between muu and nous, was vn mora npufnut to him. Consequently, m screed to to along. UorgnUu also approved. and In the last dars Dougnton committee baa been working hard. with Harrison acting as a sort of senate observer, on a bill planned on radical revision tinea. What la stirring about the story la the Intimation of the patriotism and good aenas of the average Amer ican, without whoee ever Increaelnc Inalatence on a tax program the radical revisionists could never have succeeded. La Folletta. for example, has been preaching a broadened Income tax base for the last 10 years, always without success because of con great' fear of the political consequences. now. on the very eve of the presi dential election. 3.000.000 or more people are to be added to tha list of taxpayers and all because the congress Is convinced that taxes have suddenly become good politics. Day's 1 -i j.' ?, i-'i Personal Health Service By William Brady. M. P. aigned letters pertaining to agonal health .ad hygiene, hot toJIseMS ., o, treatment, will be aiuwered by Or. Brady If a stamped self .Xisrd Tnvetop. la enclosM. Letter, ehould be brief and -rltu. I. i owln. to th. large Dumber, of letter, received only a few can be anwered. pl l be mad. to querle. not conforming t. Instructions. dda Dr. William Brady, 6S El Cainlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. THE REFRIGERATION OF BACON George Washington became president at the age of 97 years and died in 1799 at the age of 67 years. That was less than 140 years ago, yet we are without any knowledge of the cause of Washing t o n's death. Was it d 1 p h t h e rla, pne u m o n 1 a, quinsey, Lud wig's angina? Or waa the man bled to death? It does not seem that a man of Washington's good liv ing habits and strong consti tution would be greatly injured by the loss of a half pint of blood 16 hours before death and another half pint perhaps eight hours before death, inan acute illness. Nobody knows what caused George Washing ton's death. Sir rrancis Bacon died 314 years ago, ot reirigeration. i would not go so far as to say that Bacon froie to death, but I have it on the authority of that distinguished clinician. Frederic J. Haskin, that Bacon died as the "result of a cold caught during an experimenta tion on the refrigeration of fresh meat." That reminds me two days before Washington's final ill ness he came back from a ride to his farms with his collar still wet and snow hanging upon his hair, and sat right down to dinner without chang ing td dry clothes. Will some one kindly find out whether this circumstance had anything to do with Washington's Ill ness? If a trick doctor so far for got himself as to file with his health department a report of Illness as a "cold" or sign a death certificate like that, he would find himself called upon for an explanation. No one ser iously recognizes cold as rational explanation of illness or death. The term is Just a meaningless, we can't say harm less one for filling in the blank or silent space when you don't know what really Is the matter. In my files are enough ab stracts, clippings and reprints from current medical literature (not lay publications) to fill a set of books that would make Dr. Elliott's lot look miniature. Yet in all this Imposing chatter it Is hard to find an observation or a fact that stands from season to season. Although It is filed under the heading of "Cold," In order to keep the filing system In order, some day when my secretary isn't here I'm going to transfer it to another and more fitting head ing, viz., Malarkey. (Medical). Nearly every day some wise acre asks peevishly why in the name of well, let us say bet ter health do I insist in calling the common cold by a name nobody understands or uses, and Just what difference it makes anyway whether a person calls it cold or cri? Here there Is room to mention only three rea sons: (1) because cold has noth ing to do with the Illness or Indisposition; (2) because cri (kree) means merely Common ResDiratory Infection, is non committal as to the precise na ture of the infection, but still conveys fair warning to all con cerned, and so has some pro phylactic value In Itself. IjiESTIONa AD ANSWERS Ethyl nasollne Please state whether a person could contract lead poisoning from driving in a cloned car using tetra-einyi leaded gasoline, or from handling ethyl gasoline In Una wagon or fill- Ing ststlon work. (A. H. P.) Ana During eight years. U pos- , slble caaea among filling station i attendanta and similar workers were Investigated by experts of the U. 8. Public Health Service, but lead waa j not found a factor In any of the cases. The present opinion, based on careful study and obaervaUon. Is that there Is very little danger of lead poisoning from thst source. Baby nook What, you actually hsve a baby? Accept my applause, end also. If you will provide a tumped envelope bearing your address, a complimen tary copy of the Brady Better as Bigger Baby Book. The envelope must be of -standard slse. properly stamped and addressed. If it la a dinky envelope or not stamped or addressed "Local" or "City" your naby will have to struggle along without Dr. Brady's counsel and advice, that's all. Your request must be mtilled before July I. Vlte Is Another Name for It I receled your most instructive booklet "Reserve Power" about two months sgo and can say that It has slresdy don. more things for me than I thought possible. . . . t am enjoying life for' the first Um. In yeara. . . . (A. C. MscN".) Ana The booklet deels with ex trusion of the prime of life In both directions. For copy send stamped envelope bearing 'your address, and ask for "Reaerve Power." (Protected by John T. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Person, wishing to communicate with Dr Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D, tea El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. Th. tax story la by no mean, at an and. either. In a remarkable speech. Mm. daya ago, senator Byrd proposed a program of national de fense expenditures far higher than the president haa asked, accompanied by etll! more daring taxes and a 10 per cent out In government expenditure, except those for de fense. Shortly thereafter, without mentioning the Virginian, th. White House Indicated that all government expenditures ought to be cut 10 per cent wherever possible. Mow Byrd Is going to take th. president at hla word, offering an amendment to the tax bill making the 10 per cent cut mandatory In all Items except defense and th. interest on the public debt. Th. temper ot the timer la such, further more, that little aa th. administra tion may like th. Byrd amendment, It will be extremely bard to resist. Then too treasury and federal reserve officials and new dealers close to th. White House are beginning to murmur a little about th. new tax plana. In the next session they had alwaya expected to Introduce an excess profits tax. aimed at th. large profit, from rearmament. There was considerable pressure oa Harrison and Doughton to include excess profit, taxes In the program now before congress, but they refused on the ground that there was no time to write a good bill of such complex character. It la quit possible, however, that th. president will suddenly demand an .xcess profits tax: taking a fling at war profiteer!, before the summer adjournment. And if b. restrains his natural . Impulse now but la reelected, he wilt certainly follow th. original scheme to ask for an excess profits tax next January. Flight 0' Time Medior and Jackaoa Canty History from th. file, ef I be Mall Trlkoa. I and ft I ears AT THE National Capitol WITH Job W. Kelly CONTINUED PROM PAOE ONE demonstrate how things should bo run. and, all the leaders had fr.lks who reached these shores on the Mayflower. FRENCH SAY 400 NAZI IMS L0S1 New York, June 8 ( T1 The French aovernment radio esti mated that 400 more German tanks were destroyed yesterday, a British news broadcast heard at the Columbia Broadcasting System's station said today. This would make 800 tanks i of Germain's nriioiiul force of; 3.000 rt'po:1cd destroyed since' the battle of the Somme began.' THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNER Released by the North American Newspaper - Alliance. Inc. ' poison. Th. general Idea waa to present vomethlng aa painless aa possible, shove it through congress rapidly, and then tax. credit tor greet political bravery. ii, -c ami iiiniijr iinr 111,111 n uina books by such authors as Hemingway, Dos Passos, Latzko and Aildinirtnni written not only against the hatefulnesa and cruelty and filthinrss of war but written also against the fine phrases and the rhetorical formulae by which war was made." "The.-o are tlie honest word of honest men. writers of great kill ;,nrl intt'cnty and devotion. They ay what all of us alter th- .ir would have .uj if we could They say what all of us who were in the war believed. But Washington. June 8. Like all the best political stories, the story behind the increase in the national defense tax bill is part ly ludicrous and partly stirring The Joke is on the surface be ing the spectacle of Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi encour aging his colleagues to rebellion In one breath, and in the next (.niemnty warning the house leaders and treasury authorities. "I can t hold them; 1 Just can't hold my boys." The origins! tax bill was a maks- - . - 4 . ahlft Hating been wrung from the, JYQ liUlllOD administration oy r,,w.t. , i phenomenon of American cituwns deluging the government with de mands for higher tsxes. It tll! conlstned tra,-es of the orV.r.al ' tfmlnlnrstl, a theory that isirs in aa .lection jeer re sure poinu-al i Even before Pat Harrison got to work. Senator Robert M. La Pollette of Wisconsin. Senator Harry T. Byrd of Virginia, and one or two other membera of th. senate finance com mute, had decided that the bill was a fraud. At th. very first commit tee meeting, they protested bitterly sgalnst It. calling for really radical revision of the tax structure, a broadened Income tax base, and sur taxes especially aimed at the fruitful field of $10000 to SSO.OOO Incomes. Harrison's Ideas coincided with those of Byrne and La toilette. Seeing hit chance, h. quietly put bis Influence behtnd their movement. Before long the radical revisionists composed a committee majority and th. aenate at large had begun to scowl and nsp. It was then that Harrison went to Chairman Robert L. Doughton of the house a ays and means commit tee, and to secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. to announce 'hat he could not "hold them" Doughton had been extremely reluc. tsnt to attempt any sort of us bill. J1MMIE (Golden Boy) Cromwell, who married Doris Duke, helresa, told th. Canadians the United States should join the allies then resigned a. minister to run for senstor of New Jersey. Bill Bullitt, missed by a German bomb In the raid on Paris, at a French dinner assured his hosts thst America would back them up etlll repaying Lafayette. Again on th. horn, scene. William Allen White heada an organisation to go the limit for the allies, and the organisation has some big nemes of the "right people," none, of course, of military age. Bit by bit the neutrality wall ta being battered down. Concessions are being made, a little here, a little there. No longer la It necessary to take a British -bought plsne and push j It across the Canadian border to can take their aircraft and fly them to Newfoundland, If necessary, and may yet be permitted to fly them across the Atlantic. Agitation has started for American naval vessels to convoy merchantmen. The admin istration la taking ttepe to blockade supplies Intended for Germany by way of Vladivostok. Except theoretically, th. United State. Is no longer neutral and "short of war" Is a silent partner of the allies. see F'R th. first time In history a great political party on th. v of Its convention 1. discussing not someone for president, but for vie. president. It la Roosevelt by accla mation (ir Jim Parley and Jack Oarner withdraw their nameal. Th. wsr has settled thst. But what con cerne the Democratic party now la selection of a running mate for P. D. R. Never before haa such a situation developed where Interest center, on th. tail of th. ticket. Current beat bet It Senator Jim Byrnes of South Carolina, who la closer to Mr. Roose velt than any other man "on the hill." By Frank Jenkins THERE are Interesting slants In the new. todar (Friday). The French claim to have des troyed 400 of the 2000 tanks tha Germans are said to have thrown Into the big battle now raging. Their tank-trapping tecnnique (as hazily described in the cen sored dispatches) is intriguing The terra "swinging gate" is ap plied to it today In the dis patches. Apparently the tanks are allowed to pass tnrougn me front lines with little resistance and are then hammered from ambush with anti-tank guns machine guns and 79a firing point-blank hit "with every thing but the kitchen sink," as we Americana say. NOTHER development shows " up in the news for the first time today. The tops of the German tanks (covered with lid somewhat like the manhole of a sewer, are their weakest spots, so the al lies hastily bolted fair-sized can non to the bottoms of their planes and with these impro vised flying batteries they are pounding the nazi tanks from above. 1 ANOTHER hint that may be merely wishful thinking. Allied observers report that the German dive bombers (the dreaded Stukas that worked such havoc at the start of the big western front push) appear to be less numerous and less daring than at the beginning. These observers comment that this involves no apparent break ing of the German morale but dive bombing is such a strain on the pilots that human endur ance can stand up under it only so long. There are notes here and there to the effect that German infantry is beginning to move into the battle lines in more or less the old manner of warfare, with less dependence on mech anized units. NOTE also that in rearranging him linaa fni. Ihn final and desperate defense of Paris Gen eral Weygand abandoned entire ly the idea of relatively thin, strongly fortified lines of de fense, such as the Maginot, and introduced the idea of "deep lines," which you have seen commented on so much in the past two days. The Germans broke through the former thin lines too easily and once behind them worked havoc with their swiftly moving mechanized units. The purpose of the deep lines Is to pocket the tanks and other machines and destroy them before they can get clear through. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June l. 130. (It waa Monday) State bankers to convene here. Four local banks show prosper ity. Heat wave over state near end, weatherman predicte. Fishing reported good at Dia mond Lake. Ned Harrell, Medford youth graduates at Naval academy with special honors. Jacksonville Masonic lodge la 75 years old. Census shows Jackson coun ty has 32,905 people. New black and tan auto li censes ready June 15. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 6. 1920. at was Tuesday) Governor Lowden of Illinois, GOP presidential candidate de clares "Lets end our own woes first, and then Europe's". Dorothy Dalton in "The Dark Mirror" at the Liberty; A. C. Al len's picture of local and nature pictures at the Rialto. "America First" is keynote of Republican convention. Sen. Lodge in first talk says "defeat of Woodrow Wilson dynasty, and all it stands for, transcends all other issues, along with the restoration of fundamental ideals trampled on while war raged." New relchstag near in Ger many. Construction of Medford Ir rigation started with 100 men and teams employed. BRITIflPERTS SAY NAZI IS I F ING Ll IT IS far too early to predict that the power of the Ger man drive is ebbing, but these new developments (if accurate ly reported) do at least indicate pretty surely that the French and the British are getting over their first shock of dazed sur prise and are fighting not only bravely but RESOURCEFULLY. To Postal Parley Washington, June 8. A representative of the post office department will attend the Ore gon Federation of Post Office Clerks' convention, June 22-23, at Eugene, Senator McNary was advised today. British Envoy Caught Berlin, JuneS JP The Brit ish ambassador to Brussels, Sir Lancelot Oliphant, was captured with British expeditionary force troops left behind in France, UNB. official Germany news agency, announced today. London. June 8. (JP) Dr. Hugh Dalton, minister of eco nomic warfare, told the British people in a broadcast tonight that "streaks of shortage are spreading like welts across the economic body of Germany." Britain's economic warfare, Dr. Dalton said, is forcing Ger mans to live on accumulated stocks and "in this colossal ef fort she Is expending them, eating into them at a tremend ous rate. "She can never replace them now and stocks that Hitler had stolen by his marauding expedi tions in Denmark, Norway and the low countries are very small compared with his vast needs." Hitler, he said, has not Im proved Germany's economic po sition by the Denmark and low country move. He pointed out that these countries depended on import". Hitler "may plunder enough from the enslaved little coun tries to feed his hungry peo ple during this summer," Dr. Dalton said, "but as summer turns into autumn he begins to lose many of the normal exports from these countries Into Ger many. "Hitler and his advisers will put on solemn faces when they speak of oil." The Allies have virtually cut off the Germans from rubber, ferro-alloys, oilseeds, cotton and wool, all key war supplies. Dr. Dalton said. British golf courses are being used for rifle rangee to train volunteer dm defense guards. I RUPTURED? 9 IUTMrtsBtit with tMbeafct Itqmm at th p Tur ktekCltg. will prv SMtly. S JIU P t CeSJC lot tk) MFrr eAlJ(ls (fa el W will fell t rr.Fti kt Mttr MttcctJM. U tmi cWitf mir Sj 4 rfWtnJ tJ r cwnaf lb rrttef VCeBittft Or ).. pttj Mtj 1gUt gji m4 rJ tigyt tjfxfajr cwp- etat Bendf). trwM fetttaa btn Wm rejr4 cneMC CUeJBnttBf il aveM Vttrfc Purchatwd f easasVteekaal W VI t D BERG BROS. SMELTING ft RSflNlNO CO. pAlttl f . V F-sjJir'wM rfcaet eat a.JlleU i Pw4 TrwiM vtwcfc ! th mptur. I nth toatrttdaa ! tfimti rirj try Mkt wppltnt. W ml mm cc i aM ! Ab4tkt. ftusprt!S. UMM wteMMr. Bhmi4 liwtwm. Of. Heath's Drug Store INVEST by JUNE TENTH earn your first dlvld.nd for full month en July first, then each ais months th.realier. Accounts up to IS. 000. 00 are INSURED by the Federal Savings k Lean Insurance Corporation, an agency ef the United States Government. JACKSON COUNTY FEDERAL Savings & Loan Association 126 East Main