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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1940)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, AUGUST 11, 1940 MEDFORDttlTBIBUNE Oailf ftsrvpS SMlartte.. tittsh4 ar MCDCVHU FHINTINO Oil SA-37-2S North plr St. Pnons 1141. rt'lWCK"! W HUH I SJitor. mB.sr.ir R OILSTKAP. Slaoasa. A lBlpMlnl Nawapapar. lr SS SMOfitf ! anBUaf l Md tard. UragM under 4Jt af arc S, Kit HliHricKIKI (UN ftSTata By Mali la A4auoi Dai if sod aunta u rar DaMf and aun-iaf ait moat ha... $ IS Daily aod uq4f thraa months Daily and tundap na fnontb.. T r Carrtar la A1ac Madroid Aaa land. OamraJ Pm, Jaekaoaallia, Odd HllL Rfut ftivar. PaoaaiA, Talaat. and aa motor rouiaa: Dally aod tfuitftar taar fl.SS Dally atid unrtay on a month... .11 All (arm a cash la advanca. Orrtrlai Papa at tba 11? af MasJ fatal Offtrtal Papat a4 Jarkaaw OtMialj MKMHfcatiir IHk AWMN IAI PI Patfc KacoJa-ta Pall I aaafd Mira aWalra. Toa Aaawiaiad praaa la eluatai aa tit lad la ma uaa fen pukileauoa af all diapatehaa aradiiad la II or athar Has aradiiad la thie pa par. and aJaa la lbs laeai aawa pu bit ah ad fiarata. AU rlMa for puhMcatloa f apll dltpatahaa karaia ara aiaa raaarad- MSMHCR UP UNITED PHEM W CM UK A Of AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION AdvartlaiQf Iiapiaaaatat1a WBdT-HOl MDAT COMPANY. IMC Offlaaa la Naw far, lhieasa. Oat rait aa Pranelaca. Laa Angalaa Saartla, Portland. SL Laait Atlanta, Vanooo ar B C. fit aiLis IITIH -3T Ye Smudge Pot Bjp Arthur Ptffy. Th. hllla around here, that last ipring never looked greener, now never looked browner, or yellower. Wendell Willkie. the G.O.P. presidential nominee, came out last week for leaving the farm problem, as it Is, until a better one comes along, and believes farmers like S. (Farm -Fresh) Morris of T-Rk, and F. Luy, the Antelope dude of the haystacks, hould continue to come to town on business, even If they haven't any. .... C. Hoover has found another grass, that Is fit for everything, but something to eat for break fast. ... Old Sol beamed radically the past week, but people sweated cheerfully, as they know the hotter It gets here, the more so it will be in Snmaliland, Africa, where Mussolini's troops are feinting and fainting. ... Riney Cook, the Jr. HI coach Is the bouncing father of a proud baby, who when grown-up will play right end, Instead of toot ing a trumpet In the girls' drum corps. The dial phones went Into commission over the last week end, causing the people to use their little f ingrg for something besides sticking straight out. while drinking ice tea. Rural residents still shun them, as if they were traffic lights. ... Charles Prim of Cincinnati. formerly of here, has returned after 18 yenrs for a visit. How he tore himself away from Cincy, with a ball team like they have, is beyond the valley fans. ... The L. C. Taylor boy Is a month old, and his Taw has a sore wrist from lifting him so much. ... Lorenzo Dow Fry of Phoenix, born on the same day In March as H. Flewer, the demon back and dangerous man with a screwdriver Is all primed for an expedition into Missouri in Sept. which Is unusually slow In getting here this year. ... No Roosevtlt campaign but tons, or good Third Term alibis have shown up yej in these parts, but both are reported on the way. ... The fire denartmrnt anri an Espee swit'-h engine whistled at one and the same time, the for mer out-winding the latter. ... A number of the Older Girls have returned from slapping mosquitoes bv the wnnrieri lake. and missing them oftencr than their husbnnds. ... Vern (Shotgun) Cannon, the rock-ribbed democrat, was ac cused Thurs. by F. Schefiel. the city eng. of deserting the party of Jefferson, Jackson, Cleveland. G. Codding, himself and others too numerous to mention. The resulting laugh from Shotgun was not the usual hearty blast. ... The Elks' tom-cat reports a bad boy shot M him with an air gun Wed. and hit a window In the Baptist church. ... John M'nn has started an Au gust blanket sale, and has nice weather for It. Hob Deuel is warning people not to get caught with their woodpile down, as winter doth approach. Approilmateljr I0O0 0O0 person, derive a livelihood from th. lsi C. 8 national f.re.u In 40 il.lt. Alaeka and Putrtg Rico Cm Mali Trlbuna tut so. Lindbergh Is Answered OF all the answers to Lindbergh's recent radio talk, Walter Lippmann's stands out as by far the best. Instead of dismissing the Colonel's argument as pro-German, Lippmann logically and convincingly answered it - Emphasizing the point that Lindbergh granted the first condition to this country's future peace of mind and security, was an "impregnable defense", the Herald-Tribune columnist pertinently asked, how long it would take to make our defenses impregnable, and what this country and Germany would be doing in the MEANTIME? THE point is well taken, and as we see it, unanswer able. This country can't have an impregnable defense, can't in fact put itself into fighting trim, against a foe like Nazi Germany, inside of four or five years at the very least. This is no secret. Every military and naval expert in Washington has admitted it. All the world, includ ing the totalitarian world, knows it. . . . THEREFORE if Great Britain goes down, and her fleet goes down with her, what sort of a spot will Uncle Sam be in, on the basis of Colonel Lindbergh's own argument? Uncle Sam will be far out on a limb, with nothing approaching an impregnable defense, victorious Ger many on one side and hostile Japan on the other! That is why it is so necessary, declares Mr. Lipp mann, to keep the British fleet in being, if that can possibly be done. We fail to see how anyone, including the "Lone Eagle" himself, can face the facts as they exist at the present time, and fail to agree with that. U. S. Enemy No . SENATOR Holman's statement that not Germany Kilt -Tanan ia American K!nomv Mn 1 will cnrnrico no one who has been around Washington, D. C, since the present war began. In army and navy circles particularly, the real fear has been directed continually toward the setting, not the rising sun. Could the Nippon menace somehow be removed, every army and navy man in Washington would breathe easier. For it is generally believed that re gardless of how the battle of Britain comes out, with out Japanese aid, the Nazis can be handled for a long time on a defensive basis by the present U. S. fleet. iniILE on a recent trip to Washington, the present writer was running into this Japanese threat, constantly, from White House press conferences, to military and naval committee meetings all down the line. And a singular feature was that no word of this undercurrent of fear, ever appeared in the daily press, or was sent out by the press associations. ..... THIS feature of the Holnian declaration is therefore surprising, that the Oregon Senator should have made such a statement in public debate. We have a pious idea it was the result of one of Rufus's sudden impulses, and immediately afterward regretted. This was indicated by his subsequent "back-track", that he did not mean to imply that Japan contemplat ed any attack upon Alaska or the Pacific coast, in the "immediate future." That is precisely what naval officers in Washing ton do fear, although nothing publicly is ever said about it. Not the "immediate days, but in the matter of months, or one or two years. And not Alaska or the Facific coast necessarily but Pacific possessions which would render U. S. partici pation, imperative. Yes, that's the real line-up in Washington and has been for sometime. It is not from the Atlantic but from the Pacific, that the chief threat to U. S. security is expected to come. Medford's Place on the Air Map. TO Glenn Jackson, President of the Jackson (no relative) County Chamber of Commerce all credit is due, for the allotment of $120,000 for the improve ment of the Med ford airport. It was a one-man job, and by personal appeal and contact with the powers that be, the C. of C. executive, did the trick. More power to our "Little Giant" dynamo ! THIS is a small percentage of the amount originally desired to give Medford a super-airport, but it nevertheless represents a long step toward that final goal. For unless the local airport were of potential im portance from a national defense standpoint, the U. S. war department would never have Oked even this small project. Under circumstances which now exist the war department doesn't do things that way, ami the war department shouldn't. ..... 1TE don't mean the Medford airport is to be made ' an important army or navy air base from the national riandpoint, that isn't in the cards. But wo do mean that with this improvement authorized, Medfortl is assured an airport that will be an integral part of the Pacific coast aerial set-up, and a PERMA NENT one. Which is only another way of saying that Medford's importance as an air transportation center, in time of peace as well as war, is bound to increase, as a result of this action. Medford is now on the national air map to stay! future" in the matter of Personal Health Service By WiilLm ftlcnrd letters pertaining peraonal health a4 hjften, not f tUagnoftta or I real meat, will b an awe red b? Dr. Brad if a ata roped aelf addrraaed entelope U enclosed. Let ten ahould ba brief and written la Ink. Owing to tli large numbers of letters received only a few raa be antwered. No replr can be made to q aeries not conforming to Initractlons. Address Dr. miliarn Brady. 263 CI Cam I no. Beterlr Hills, Calif. HYGIENE FOR ONE SUB Having held the bad habit of constant nagging with physics responsible for the development of hemorrhoids (piles) in great many cases, I suppose it is only fair to say that a dose of salts, any kind of brisk saline cathar tic (least ob Jectio nable, perhaps, is a bottle of Solu tion of Magne f I u m Citrate Effervescent the whole 12 ounce bottle is only a moderate dose) is a good emergency remedy for the re lief of an acute, painful "attack" of piles. The direct effect of a dose of salts is to attract water, from the congested area, and discharge the water in watery evacuations, and this diminishes portal congestion and hence di minishes congestion in the hem orrhoidal area. No local or internal medica tion can cure piles in the sense of putting an end to the trou ble. Local medication can only relieve pain or congestion and so help to shorten the discom fort or suffering of the "at tach." After the "attack" is over, that is, after the inflam mation subsides, the pile or piles are still there, and it is I only a question of time, habits and personal hygiene how long before another "attack will occur. One who suffers from recur ring "attacks" of piles or from pain or from bleeding, should not temporize or waste time and money on nostrums pur porting to be "pile cures, but should have the trouble prop erly treated as a matter of com fort, good health, safety and economy. The modern treatment of piles, either internal or exter nal, is practically painless and may be carried out in the phy sician's office without interrupt ing the patient's everyday ac tivities. H is as quaint and stupid to hesitute to seek med ical treatment for fear treat ment will hurt as it is to evade proper treatment from prudish embarrassment. Instead of using mail-order catalogues, flour sacks, news papers, corncobs, leaves, grass and so-called toilet paper for Kansas City. Mo., Aug. 10. This section is part of the bnttk'Kroimd for the November election. The south can scarcely be called debatable, its tradi tions are so Democratic, but Ohio, Illinois. Indiana. Iowa and Missouri can go either Re publican or Democratic. It is in this mid-west agricultural area that Oregon's Charley Me Nary is expected to be a tower of strength td Wendell Willkie. Of all the brigade willing and wanting to be nominated for vice-president, Mr. Roosevelt selected Henry A. Wallace to keep the farm vote from fol lowing McNary. In the farm belt Willkie is i.ot regarded as wearing horns because he was a utility execu live. They like his free and easy manner. As for McNary ;he requires no introduction, i After all these years the farm jers still remember the McNary 'llaugen bill and remember that (after the Oregon senator twice 'secured its passage the measure was vetoed. Many of the farm ers do not know that McNary comes from Oregon but they ,do know that he has been iden ! tided with legislation important I to farmers for some 20 years 'and that is the important thing n a campaign for votes. I I ft fTKMH'm may -H be luted a IT 1 v ill dtMibtrut. tvnstiT Bennm Clark. j err of tli tVmivmtU- art-inters fio ' arr rot a.i; port hi thr irtrnini'r-1 1 tMfi. is popular nnd his lioaUlllv : i t,'Atvl Mr. Roiwvf.t Is shsrM by ' mutiv lnvviMs ot Ins prrsunslon ) On thr e-:hrr hand. Uovnnor Stark. ; mlut nttrmptrd to ln tit Orrrn ' 1iItV!lrs lit Chicago lor TltT-prrsl- dent liitcm'.s point don thr tlnr for Mr, Kooarwlt. Ths eld IVndrr- '(not mmhinr is bnKm up but Us; ntrmbrrs rrtiirmtxred they rr or- i 1 rifffit to Support Mr. Rfifll d t that IstT thr ponrnmrnl viit thf 1p .frm to i-r j"V r-!1oUu t!if ?sr ! of Pf r.iV a'V L! ,4S KrllT of tha i ht- crt m it r.s cams out hurriedly &Mk; lrtSSiiTiiJ Brady. M. D. a JECT TO. HEMORRHOIDS toilet of the perineum, as we do in this country, it would be far better hygiene to use soap and water for cleaning and a towel merely for doing the perineal region after defecation. It would advance the level of hygiene and health in this coun try tremendously, In my opin ion, if about ten million more wash basins were installed In public eating places which now have none or impossibly primi tive accommodations for wash ing the hands. The country also needs awak ening to the value of and neces sity for bidets in bathrooms in homes. A bidet is a modified sitz bath, provided with hot and cold running waver and means of flushing; it Is a convenience for proper cleanliness and the bathroom without it is crude arrangement even if it be adorn ed with solid gold dewdags and tile right up to the ceiling. Anyway, one subject to piles must practice scrupulous soap and water cleanliness in order to avoid unduly frequent "at tacks." A single failure to ob serve this requirement may mean another attack. Iqdeed, I believe adoption of this rule of cleanliness would not only prevent much suffering from piles but would prevent also a great deal of suffering from other rectal troubles. QIT.STION AMI ANSWERS Airedale l.lkn It Following your auggeetlon X began using wheat germ. Had been In very poor health, spent largs auma but obtained little relief . . . have re ceived much benefit . .. recommend ed It to many friends . . . have given urn of th. left-over wheat germ to our Airedale and alnce h. began eating It (he like. It. tool hla fur U thicker, he haa put on weUht, and la livelier than ever. (Mrs. K. F. C.) Answer Pupa and kittens need vitamin B complex aa much as human beings do. Old doga weak In th. hind quarters need It. Dogs behaving aa though "mad1 reapond remarkably to hypodermic injections of large dosea of synthetic- vitamin Bl (thlvnln hydroclorlde). Canned Food Are all canned foods add In re action? Have read that they are. even though they hav. alkaline re action before canning. (Mrs- L. O. O.I Answer No. Canning haa practi cally no effect on th. reaction of food. (Protected by John F. Dill. Co.) Ed. Not. Penone wl.hlng to communicate with Dr. Brady hould send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 2S El Camlno. Beverly Hills Calif. drmandlni a third term for Mr. Room v It. Rrcrntlr Mr. Roosevelt took cog nlzanc of former Senator James A. Reed supporting Willkie and McNary, Implied Reed la tn the aweatahop business and a chronic bolter. Pep pery Reed produced a letter wherein Mr. Roosevelt thanked him for cam paigning In his behalf In 1933 and said Mrs. Reed'a garment factory waa aa legitimate aa various business enterprises of Mrs. Roosevelt, and shoved th president didn't know what he waa saying when mentioning the sweatshop. At thla point Oeneral (Crack Down) Johnson declared when he waa boss of th Blue tatfle Mrs. Reed's factory paid higher wages than ! others In the area and that com pet -; Ing concerns complained. a a a NO mistake about Mr. Roosevelt ( stirring up a hornet when ha . took a crack at Jim Reed, for Reed I ran make more noise and uncork sharper remarks than Senator Clark. If there la any way Reed can make Missouri jo Republican he wtll do It. The southern end of Illinois Is Republican at thla time. With Paul V. McMitt already running for presi dent In 1044 (the organisation has been Incorporated, neon algn over the door. etc.). and the 2 percent club sttll functioning. It is McNutt's par ticular Job to deliver Indiana in November for the Roosevelt-Wallace ticket. A failure might affect his own 1M4 prospects. Aa row is the horns state of Wal lace, most political dopesters concede It to the administration. Just as. presumably. Oregon will return to th Republican fold because It la the native state of McNary. However. Iowa haa 11 electoral votes and Ore gon but ft. A factor which may Influence the mid-west la the location of two score or more Industrial plants by the gov ernment for the purpose of manu facturing munitions of various sorts Although the war department will locate the plants where they will be mi effertlve. nevertheless wher tver they are placed, tt will mean a few million dolls rs. an Industrial payroll tn an agricultural reeien somrthtng not overlooked in a cam paign. s s s Iowa, ts the home of Mrs Kdwin T. Meredith, widow of the secre tary of sericulture under Wood row Wilson It nvght be supposed ihst Mrs. Meredith would support Mr Roosevelt on account of Secretary Wallsce if for no other reason, but he openly prefers Wendell Willkie snd Charles U McNary. Mrs. Mere dith may not draw much wster politically, but her action is Indica tive of anti-admlnlstratlon sentiment current in the farm belt. In Indiana Senator Van Nuts best Mr. Rooetelt's effort to purge him sftrr the court fwht bill T sensv-e dsrrd t.ie. new dealers to eut rom One of ths first srnatrs to sound a warning against th. third term mov.m.nt. Van Nurs la not bolung th. party, but h. la campaigning only for tn. atat. DcmocraUe ticket. Of th. pialdntul ticket h. aaya nothing. By and l.r-g, this agricul tural arva will play an Important part In determining th. occupant of th. Whit. Hous. in th. next four years. rln.The DayV; ;:NewS; ' By Frank J.nkins BIG air fights in Africa and over the English channel . (British and Italians In one case and British and Germans in the other) feature today's news. Both sides claim victory against odds. Both claim small losses them selves and big losses for the other fellow. 'THAT has been going on for a long time. This is the prob able explanation: Losses on both sides are heavier than either is willing to admit. A CCORDING to Dun & Brad street, retail trade is up seven to ten percent for the country as a whole over the corresponding week of last year. Retail trade, which is the best of all business indicators, will probably stay up as long as the war continues. If retail trade stays up, other business will stay up. The trouble point to watch is when the war ends and the world changes from war econ omy to peace economy. M EANWH1LE, as to any boom that may develop as a re sult of national defense activi ties, sales of war materials to Britain, etc., it is well to re member that the higher we go the farther we'll fall. This writer sincerely hopes there will be no boom, no ab normal profits just average American business, not too good and not too bad. That will be much better for all of us in the long run. IF you'll really get your teeth i into it, you'll find this dis- Irtath (mm IVachinninn Int.,. esting: "Secretary of War Stimson and Lewis Compton, assistant secretary of the navy, told a congressional committee today (Friday) that profit limitations and business uncertainty over tax legislation have delayed production of airplanes, guns, ships and other vital items of the defense program." IF you don't stop to reason it out, your first react ion to this dispatch will be indigna tion at big business and you'll be inclined to say: "These blood-suckers are putting dol lars ahead of defense." Wait a minute. Suppose you are a farmer growing potatoes and your gov ernment comes to you and tells you that hereafter you must grow wheat. You'll be worried. You'll say: 'If 1 quit growing potatoes, which I know about, and grow wheat, which I don't know about, what assurance will I have that I won't go broke?" If your government gives you no assurance whatever as to prices, taxes, etc., you'll be ex- I tremely reluctant to quit pro ducing what you're familiar with and begin producing some thing you're unfamiliar with. If j you go broke, your family may j starve. IT works the same way with business, big and little. No-! body wants to go broke. It is ' no more than reasonable that 'government should remove as ! quickly as possible thi present uncertainties as to taxes, profits, i etc. L TO CRATER PARK Portland. Aug. 10. The; j government filed a condemna tion suit yesterday against C. C. I Yawkey and seven other persons i for inclusion of 1874 36 acres of j j land in Crater Lake national 1 'park. ! Mason Dillard. asisstant United States attorney said a price of! i $6560 26 already had been: ! agreed upon. The property con-! sists of deeded land within the park boundary near the south east corner. Forgot the Bull Everett. Wash., Aug. 10. Becoming so interested In driv ing a cow into a barn that he . completely forgot tbout the bull that also was in the barn yard. Harry Claflin, 51. a farm er residing near Snohomish. was tossed over a fence and i severely iniured by tt-e animal early today. C Mu Tribune weci a-.. 1 THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNER iConllnud from Pag. On. made available to the English navy. Many paint so dark a pic ture of the future that it is al most impossible not to wonder whether they, or the politicians who behave as though the world were rocking along as usual, 1 have not gone collectively out , of their minds. a a a IN casting up the balance, ths pro phets of gloom allow little weieht to morale. Eicept that they consider the next sixty days aa "the fighting season." they think the seasonal fac tor unimportant. Always excepting the destroyer question, they admit the excellence of the English navy. But they place far the greatest em phasis on the situation in the air. The German -English air strength ratio la commonly estimated at about two and one-half to one. Relatively, the German superiority In bombing planes Is even greater. Germany has the whole European Atlantic coast to attack from, and can send a load of bombs over English ports, factories and airfields In one-third of the time tt takes an English bomber to reach a vital center. Thus, despite the gal lantry of the R. A. P. raids on Ger many, England Is regarded aa In escapably consigned for the present to the highly disadvantageous defen sive role. a a a IT Is doubted, therefore, whether the English plane-for-plane, man-tor-man advantage can turn the trick as Col. Donovan predicts. So far the experts generally agree, although some paint a still darker picture. They also generally agree In believing that the German air force has been tuning up. to date, with desultory raids on England, probably while waiting for quantity produc tion of improved types, and tn ex pecting the real attack to come be fore the "fighting season" passes. They do not agree as to the pattern of the attack. The most convincing theory Is that a tremendous air assault on England, using almost the full Ger man strength, will come first. Then, under cover of Intensive air-warfare, forces now concentrating in Norway will attempt to take possession of the Shetland and Faroe Islands and perhaps of Ireland, while fifth col umnlsta, who have been observed in great numbers, may also try to seize the Azores. Simultaneously the Italian drive ('. vs. siv'w; TH-t I I ,v !aei? V flj I ISQOK I OOOISS' RANG! RS) jSsYBRGirffs, and Cast of Thousands f &t 1 ROBERT YOUNG 11IM TCO DDrillllll PFNDI FTDN . RUTH . , . ,,w When ailp tnf rat. meet llao.lt.n hois hula. . . there', tun and nh.xpee tn , . P . . . at ttal-KI-kl , . . : : "HAWAIIAN NIGHTS" JOHNNY IIOWV. ( MIHV (IKItMF t.iil nl il l n t oivrr mookk Malt. Mjlnerk and Orrhe.tra and ol HtMipll Haaallan lUnd 5V I Complete Sho To.l. -rM.i P1ROXY r-o s o-: ; I" is agalnat Sues may b. aupplennte4 by a big operation against Gibraltar. In th. end. If this atrategy sueceetfa, England wiU be pulvenred. aurround Ing "slege-polnta" will bar. been establlahed and Kngland a vital aea communlcatlona will be aerloualy threatened. Th j. th. way will b. prepared lor th. actual Invasion of England, which may be considerably delayed. It la not a pleasant forecaat, but It deserrea careful consideration. Flight (T Time Medford and Jaiktoii County Hlttorr from the (I net of th SMall Tribune 10 and to years Ho. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 11. 1330. (It was Monday.) Mayor Pipes favors ban on "tree-sitting" by small boys. 1 bad for their health, and "pro ductive of no good." Four mem bers of the Medford local gen eration now out on a limb. Nine killed and 20 hurt In accidents in Oregon over the week-end. Rain and cool breeze end dan ger of drouth In tht Mississippi valley. Seven speeders returning from rural dances nabbed by traffic cops. Attcndir.ee at Crater 1 a k Sunday 3,851, the largest In history. Al Smith looms as issue In Democratic primaries. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 11. 1920. (It was Tuesday.) Wells in the Sams Valley dis trict lowest in several years. Leon H a s k i n s and family spent Sunday at Crater lake. George W. Keilson and Ver non Edwards, a civil engineer in the service of the S. P. & S. R. R. of Portland, stopped off Wednesday to get dinner, as they wanted to make their reg ular trip for that day. Mr. Neilson is the superintendent, manager and conductor of the P. ft E. and is one of those hustlers who keep things mov ing. (Eagle Point Eaglets.) The warehouse at the Del Rio Orchard burns, causing a $12, 000 loss. A. L. Parkhurst, manager of Crater Lake Lodge, to quit In fall. The Greatest Outdoor Adventure of Them All Ella Mel laa I iiiiMitf J-l.mm I lllllCU III Living Technicolor! TODAY - 3 DAYS Ripped from the pate, of fron tier hl.lnrv . . . brralh-taklnf In rolnr . . . Tracy In hi. treat et role as Major Robert Itocrr. HIT UIICCCY jHL i ' u-uti . aa i im mr at 1 11. J n.; tm-s M I -Number f" l"da at 1 - M