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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1941)
PAC! STX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD OREGON. THURSDAY. MAT 29. 1941. lfDF0RD2fcTRIBUNS Kwda llM Hall TrtbuM." DtkUy Cartrpt lsr4r. UBDrUKO PRINTING CO. M-tf- North ru u fhoM till IIOBICItT W HUHU CUtor. iinur a oiutrRAp. hikmn Batr4 nnuI matter at ata1 tord, Oracoa, .orlar al f kUrcb I, III uuac'RirnoN rates By Mli-la Advanca: Ofttir kbii raar KM Dll afJ uB1y moaiht... J I Dally an4 uh1f tiraa in out ha. I at Dally an1 un1y n month... II By Carnar la Ataaca Mafnr4. Aah Ub4. Central Poial. JacaaoBvllia. Uolrt HIIL Rou Hiar. FKaanla, Talaat. ad aa motor roulaat Dally aad Sunday ana yaar !. Dally aAd Suadar ooa moatti,,, .11 AU urmi taah la advaaca. Official rapt at (t nt at MadTartf OtrtataJ rmprr at Jaraaa Caualy MKUHUUOft Ilia. 4M4m'IATKIM'UKa Baaaivlaaj roll laa4 Wlr Marvlr. Tha Aaaoalaiad Hraaa ia aicluaivaiy a tit lad la lha aaa for publication at an mwi diapatenaa araditad ta II mr at hat -wlaa araditad ta ihia pa par. and alaa U iba laaai mm pubnahad harala. All right tor pubiicatloa of paiJ dhapatataa barata ara aiaa raaarvad. or uni rmo fRRua MM H ICR OK AUDIT BtiRCAl OF CIRCULATION! Adarttaiag Rapraaantatlvaa WWT-HUU.IUAT COMPANY. INC. Oftiaaa ia Naw far. CMeaw Dauolt. rrmaolaoo. Loa An !, lUattia, FartUnA SL baata, Atlanta, Vanaouvar. H C 0ll(0(fnaT4trkrli Hiu$irydf$oeiTiii alJ?3 Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Parry. Among other things, the President in his fireside chat, comes out for "freedom of the seas." This Is a revived 1917 war issue, and Is apt to cause soma statesmen to hit a high one. Tha constabulary hears the noisiest auto horn in town causes babies to cry. It also causes grown-ups to feel like it. Tha esteemed Salem Capital Journal editorially argues what the country needs is "a good five cent psychiatrist." The country in its current mood would spend the nickel for a cigar. Secy Hull opines the 'law of retribution" had something to do with the sinking of the Nazi dreadnaught Bismarck. Another source attributes the victory to British prayers for vengeance. Prayer and retribution will have to share the glory, three ways, with the torpedo that applied the finishing touches. Tha rain yes. drove Vlntle Beall of tha C.Pt. district Into town, hitting nothing coming or going. Mr. B feared for a time tha barn would beat the rain to bis hay. Tha hairy vetch and the beard ed barley in the valley are com ing along fine, and will soon be In need of haircut and shave. WONDERS NEVER CEASE (Salem Capital-Journal) "It is somewhat mystifying, however, to account for the fact that private citizens in such numbers ran smell out the existance of these illegal contrivances when our profes sional sleuths can find no trace of them. "So far as wa ara advised, tha sheriff and his deputies have not employed brass bands to herald their approach. The slot machine and punch board operators must be psychic, or a lot of good citizens are suf fering from hallucinations. Surely the sheriff cannot be wrong." . The cantonment. If and when, It is argued, will take the "eco nomic load" off the pears. Fur thermore, It won't be necessary to spray the commanding of ficer, j ... Max Schmeling, once a color-1 ful heavyweight champion of j the world, who lulled Champion j Joe Louis to sleep with his good right hand, has been killed in 1 Crete, while trying to escape from his British raptors. He; was a bettor man than the runt-1 tsh ex-papcrhanger who mrs-1 merlzes Germany. He could take I Hoodlum Hitler by the slack in the seat of his military britches and drive him head-first three feet into the good earth. But, aad to till, he didn't. "... It was believed that ... all would recover, although two doctors and a nurse were In at tendance during the night " (Olympla (Wash) Olympian) The muffled knock. ... "In-as-much-as we have been able to dig up any scandals of any sort, no wife beating, run away hubbies, stolen autos. or fights, may we soliloquize a moment on vitamins with the editor's kind consent? We left the demonstration thoroughly vitamlnlzed! Our hearts went out In sympathy to our poor grandmother and grandfather, both of whom lived to be past 90 years and never had been intro duced to a vitamin, or waterless cooking!" (Merlin corr. In the Grants Pass Bulletin) And Grandpa, before retiring, drank three glasses of strong apple) cider to wash down a liberal helping of crackers and cheese, ! to sleep better man log. A E L. Shows the Way THERE is a noticeable distinction between the atti- tude of the A.F.L. and C.I.O., regarding strikes that hold up and impair the country's defense pro gram. Repeatedly A.F.L. officials have pledged full sup port to the defense program, and some have even advocated no walk-outs without a fixed period of preliminary mediation for "the duration." In marked contrast the C.I.O. leaders have not only sanctioned strike after strike, but have shown no sympathy with, or interest in, the defense program. Any suggestion that strikes be outlawed until the war is over, or even that a compulsory period of arbi tration be imposed before a strike can be called, has been met with loud outcries from the CIO leadership, that the right to strike under any and all conditions is organized labor's "magna charta." a a VESTERDAY the following edict was issued from A. F. L. headquarters : "All affiliates are Instructed to take disciplinary action against locals that strike without exhausting first every re source for peaceful mediation." All credit to the American Federation of Labor! That is precisely the action this paper has urged upon the administration, since the passage of the lend lease bill, which in our judgment, -committed this country to do everything in its power to defeat Hitler. It is the same action imposed by the Railway Labor Act, which has practically eliminated strikes in American railroad operation. 9 9 99, A NY division in labor circles at such a critical time as this is to be deplored. But it IS consoling to know that the oldest and largest unit of organized labor places the welfare of the country above every selfish consideration, and is directly opposing the younger, smaller and more radical unit of labor that doesn't 1 Keeps Everybody Guessing TIELL, there is one thing regarding the President's war speech no one can deny: It did nothing to lessen world confusion. In fact even the Axis powers can't ing. Japan, for example, declares the speech undoubt edly means active U. S. participation in the war. iJerlin professes to see no no intensification of same, little new in the long-heralded broadcast that no of ficial comment can be expected. Italy, on the other hand, is reported as greatly cheered and relieved by the President's "unexpected mildness." Declares Percy Winner, I. N. S. correspondent at Rome: . "Thank God It wasn't worse! Now there Is a chance of ending he war before autumn." This remark Is typical of the Italian people's reaction t& the White House declara tion. Perhaps one of the motives of the President was to keep the enemy guessing. If so, he was magnifi cently successful, not only in that part of the world, but every other ! Predicts War in Pacific '"I17HAT two generations of Americans feared ' would one day come about now seems to be almost upon us," says Edgar Snow, expert news analyist from the far east, fcnow discusses the pos sibility of war with Japan in his article, "Showdown in the Pacific" in the current issue of The Saturday Evening Post. "Today Washington is aggressive Eastern neighbor that she cannot cut her self any more of the Pacific," says Snow, who has re cently returned to the United States after thirteen years in the Orient. "Perhaps it can be confined for some time to the kind of war Japan invented full of streamlined incidents; but with or without trimmings, what we are touching is war. "Among acute observers, among our naval and military people around the Orient and in our islands of the Pacific, I have, for months past, heard this war discussed exclusively in matter-of-fact terms of how and when and where. Few people now believe that diplomacy can do more than postpone it. The truth is that relations between the United States and Japan r ft Tn nil 11 rtXl'rtl V ! I-li-ltVl O 1 . 1 cl n rt Mnl stm i w rt o.v ..w .... ...w. c,..-. .-, ..v.Mnn hi gics and the broad deployment of battle forces. "MOTHING is Certain these day?, and least Of all in tVi( Oriont." onntinnps tho author "lmt thrpp (1,,'., . , ., , i,, ..,.. 1,1 l t.i things now seem to me to be reasonably probable- though by no means probably reasonable. The first 19 that the United States Will fight, if noCCSSarV. to ..,,( i,. m.-., .n ; ,l. i,.:,:v J preent Japan fiom seeming baes in the hntish and PlltCh Colonics Of Southeastern Asia and MalaVSia. The second is that Japan nios soon I believe this year or abandon her whole dream of southward expansion and mastery of tht western Pacific. And the third, that what Japan does in the next few month- can decisively influence the outcome oi tne nauie lor turope itseit. In reply to the question put by Snow, a British en voy stated that he believed it impossible to effect an Anglo-Japanese reconciliation and avoid war. "We shall have to fight Japan," the envoy told Snow. "My mission is to delay it as long as possible. I do not anticipate peat ?UCCeS, battle COmes, We shall not ApprntimatrlT 14 ooo - of j .ld hipjd frcm rmnc a yrar i". are stored al Martinique. agree regarding its mean such danger, or at least declarinir there was so about ready to tell our herself undeclared and must pOUnce Oil those COlo- bllt 1 hope that When the be alone Ollt here." , It w.a from Mrttn:qiie th.t plune. Emprew ol N,v.v!i, went to I Franca. Personal Health Service By William Slf nd letters pertaining la peraanal aeallh aa hygiene, net la disease SI.ino.li mr traaloMat, will ka aruatred ky IM. Brady If a stamped aau addreasrd anntlope la enclosed. Letters aBeeM ta brier and a-nuea la Ink Owing la IM large number al letters melted eoly a few ran be enswartd bare. Ke reply eaa be made la ajrjerlae not ronormlng to Instruction, addreae D, MUllarn Brady. MS ei c amino, Beierl; mils, calif. IT LOOKS A testimonial may give the, experience, opinion or wish of the writer, but unless you know the experience, opinion, or wish of the other dozen, thous and or million persons who are in a posi tion to report on the matter, it doesn't mean anything. -Dear Sir: Last spring I was so run down, tired and discourag ed all the time. All the world looked blue. My hair was very gray. (What did I tell you? Oh, I didn't tell you, did I? But I meant to convey the Idea in the title how you look depends largely on how you are feeling. This poor girl was feeling pret ty sad, and her hair looked very gray. I can't help thinking that some such state of mind may account for a good many testi monials I have received from readers who declare that their gray hair is regaining its natur al color.) I read your article about 'The Woman Who Went to Town on Iodine". I tried it, and do I feel like a different person? My hair comes in darker now, so I am about one-half as gray as a year ago. You may be sure I take my "Iodin Ration" and my vitamin B complex regularly, I seldom get the blues any more. My eldest daughter, 14, re marked, after I had been follow ing your advice a few months: "Mother, is Daddy getting bet ter natured, or what makes such a change around here? Our home seems so much happier than It used to be." I replied "The change la In me. thanks to Dr. Brady." (Come, now, Just between our selves Ol' Doc Brady is suffic ient.) Now whenever I feel low in spirit or that tired feeling comes on, I go right away and take my nip of iodine and my regular ra tion of vitamin B complex. I don't believe it darkens hair already gray, but I do know new hair comes in dark. I am 45 years old. (The rest of letter missing). If ten thousand individuals whose hair is turning gray pre maturely would try it out for six months or a year and then report whether it has done any good, we might know some thing. The instructions are given in the monograph on "Care of the -Hair" available to any one THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNER (OntlmieC Prom Pass On. I agreeing in principle on a pro- matic advantages, gram. This memorandum was ... initialled by Secretary Morgan-1 pirr this does not mean that thau. Secretary of State Cordell ; D there is not much to be done. Hull, and Attorney General 1,. on,v reallv practicai ,rfu. Robert H. Jackson. Since then ment put forward , the serv. the budget bureau, which I ice d,,partmenU against effect studies all proposals for new ( ive aid to Britain the argu. government agencies, has bceniment tha, by commlttjng our. hard at work. I selves in the Atlantic, we shall The bureau has prepared a j encourage the Japanese to mis comprehensive catalogue of all behave in the Pacific. The Jap- economic powers lodged in the , u iiui.-ii. oiivi . .-.w..... vi cuunirjr m rcunumic at order of the broadest type has j tack. Their war economy is been drawn, authorizing a new . wholly derjendent on mainten agency of economic defense to nce of their present export exercise these powers, wun re-, nwn5lbUi,v on brol)fl mMt-rs of "policy given to an inter-drirt- mental committee but with a dt- j rector as the executive head I IT Is easy to understand, but, ;1 npf to excuse the ncsltation :,nd delay when one remembers .N' b, decision had not been made and when one ex- !nmmp, ttie wyf of th, ., to be called into olav. Some of h"c powers are: Export and import control of the strictest kind: shipping and . restrictions: control bunkerage of Amerl- cn ,s,- ,,f frciKncrs through 'ZJT'JT- tries; direct and indirect com mercial prrsstires; capital con trol and all the rest of the rnor- motis economic authority now retmg In one part of the gov- ernmont or another. l'nles the Mate department suddenly re- vtvps ita l.irmrr omvisition. the new experiment will be both 'extremely far rrse-V.ins and do- tentml'y important to the Joint Ttritis'- American war effort. The price of Ji!.'V '.as t-een Iheat'y. The axis powers hav ob- Brady M. D. AS YOU FEEL who asks for it and provides a stamped envelope bearing his address. QI ESTIOSS AND ANSWERS. Liver, Iron and Vitamin B When doctors prescribe liter and Iron In severe anemia, do they mean ordinary beer or calf liter, and how about liver and bacon I mean would Uter asten In such dishes be good tor tha blood f (L. L.) Answer At least It would not be bad for anybody's blood or health. A substance present In tha lining of tha stomach and in liver la essential for generation of new blood. Cook ing destroys this substance. 'Hence doctors prescribe fresb raw liver or extracts of liter. Th. substance Is called "Intrinsic Something elea present In tha natural vitamin B comples Is likewise necessary for blood formation, and this Is called tha "extrinsic" factor. Further In formation available in booklet "Blood and Health." . 1041 edition, copy mailed on request If you Inclose 10c coin snd stamped envelope bearing your address. Tied snd I'ntled A few yean ago I was In such poor health .when my baby waa born (by Caesarian section) that my doe-' tor advised against subsequent chlld c'rth snd tied off the tubes. Now X am In excellent nealth and so terribly wish to have another, la It possible to have tha tubea reopened without a major operation. (Mr. B. A.I Answer Only by an abdominal operation would It be posalbla to reconstruct a tube which mlsht re store capacity to conceive. This Is a major operation, but not a danger ous one. Botulism Is there sny danger of contracting botulism from hon.a canned salmon not canned In pressure cooker? Could vegetables canned with vinegar, such as pickled beets, or commercially canned producta contain tha poison? (Mrs. A. E I Answer Any food that stands for soma time or Is carelessly handled before It la canned may be Infected with the Clostridium botullnus or spores of the organism, and unless tha food Is cooked or boiled for five hours or hested to 931 degrees F. for IS minutes, the spores may survive snd continue to proouce tha deadly toiln or poison In the food, no mst ter whether home canned or pickled or commercially processed. Boiling for 10 minutes destroys the toxin. It Is a good rule to discard any food that looks, tastes or smells "queer" on opening can. Mrnopanse Can you give any advice on pre venting the distressing hot flashes thst coma with change of lite? (Mrs. g. W. Aniwei. Calcium feeding and es trogen Injections by your physician. Send stsmped envelope bearing your address, for free monographs on "Menopsuae" and "The Calcium Shortage." (Protected by John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct ta Dr. nilllam Hrady, M. D. t6S El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. talned large amounts of raw materials in this country. So much axis capital has already fled this country that the freez ing order will have little effect. The nazis, through their own economic warfare, have made . .... A- JH C i. BnJ fan. .,.i a i. n. .(,. ,!,... fl delav is always the same I an.y at KSea,tle is, '"quently whether in this case, or in the j i Decause ' Jng in ,..siurt j , i an aluminum part and there is unwillingness to expand an in- .. ... . adequate scope of defense prep-1 w,,t, untl1 th new design aration or a refusal to make00' rom n ",ern ffbr known a national policy ,hat !n ?actor;- SucJj P1'"1 m'Rh could be used for great diplo anese are the most vulnerable and import balance. There is no question that an economic attack on their econ omy will make the Japanese think twice before they move. Similarly, the most serious of our problems in the western hemisphere ha, been the steady intiltration and economic pene- tration in South America by German stints. Once an effect- ,ve prpgri)m pf mnoniC dr. fens has been launched, it will be possible to f.ght Oie Ger mans with their own weapons. in this hemisphere as well as elsewhere. p -y The president has now estah- hed the major policy. And it be assumed that the de pendent decisions will follow in short oriler. They include not only the establishment of an of- fice of economic defense but a ' reorganization and expansion of i defense production; strong meas-, tires asainst nszi agents In th is : countrv: counter nrr-naeanrta in beha'.f of the democracies: a method to cope with the prob- lem of strikes in defense indus-1 tries, and all the other things reei I t procure an all-out effort by this country. ) Kelly's Comment From Washington Northwest to B Aluminum Center More Plant Site Seen Necessary Reynold Staff Ex-Federal Men By John W. Kelly Washington, D. C. May 29. Pacific northwest ia to become the aluminum headquarters of the United States, with RFC financing the greatest produc tion program on record. In addition to manufacturing ingot aluminum there will be a fab rication plant perhaps more than one. All but minor details are settled. The management of the government plant, or plants, will be in charge of companies now in the field. Reynolds Metals Co., for example, has today a contract for 60,000 kw to be delivered at Longview, Wash. The company is prepar ing a site for three times that size, to use 200,000 kw. Alcoa will manage a government plant, and the Bohn Brass & Aluminum Co. is in the picture as it now develops. It is absolutely necessary for the government to come to the Pacific northwest, for only on the mighty Columbia river is there an untapped flow of power. Conditions in TVA are becoming desperate. There is a grave water shortage and TVA, private companies, OPM, Federal Power commission, army and navy officials have been holding conferences in the national capital to plan methods of meeting the situation. Alcoa has a contract for 30,000 kw at TVA and this has been in creased to 150,000 kw extra. OPM has control of power, and through priorities will give power for national defense. To obtain more needed energy is the problem. It is suggested that the S. S. Normandie, French liner taken over by the coast guard, be moved to Mobile and its great engines used as a standby plant, after the man ner in which an airplane carrier furnished power to Tacoma sev eral years ago when Tacoma had a power shortage. Another proposal is to assemble old Diesel engines and hook them up for generating power. ... WITH the government in the power business, new sites other than Alcoa at Vancouver and Reynolds Metals Co. at Long- view will be required. One possible site is Cascade Locks: another, the immediate vicinity of Bonneville say at Dodson, a few miles from the dam and on the Oregon side. (Secretary Ickes isn't as mad at Oregon as some Oregonians imagine). Or there may be a plant spotted in the Puget sound region. Of as great importance as the pig plants and more important in the way of employment is a fabricating plant. Such a plant must be established in the northwest to provide the light metal for airplane companies. There are constant changes in airplanes. Boeing Aircraft com be located in Portland or vi cinity. (Reynolds, who contem plates a fabricating plant, says he will locate it wherever RFC tells him.) IT is worthy of note that the Reynolds company is being staffed By men from federal payrolls. Walter Rice, an at torney of the anti-trust division of the department of Justice, after attacking Aluminum Com pany of America, has resigned his government Job and is now 1 ! In JUST 1:7 ti a "CBEFRFfM. AS ITS XASiE- IPraaf 1 SUNFiYBROOK axo l LCAl STRAIGHT BOt"RBO THI5KEY V..: I f . tl a ' aWaMMlll vice-president and general coun sel of Reynolds, which the gov ernment has financed to com pete with Alcoa. Mr. Rice, it will be recalled, handled the "sick chicken" case in NIRA I days, -the decision in whlcn killed the blue eagle. From , Reconstruction Finance corpora tion (thU agency hai loaned Reynolds millions to fight Alcoa) Ir. J. Lindquist, who was chief I auditor, has resigned to become l another vice-president in the i Reynolds set-up. Marion M. iCaskie, former member and j chairman of the Interstate Com Imerce commission, has resigned from his government Job and also is vice-president, because, explains Reynolds, "he felt that he could do his country more good in this emergency by re turning to our company wan by remaining in public service." Other key men in government will Join the Reynolds concern. ... WITH OPM enforcing prior ities on power and giving first I preference to national defense, this organization may aeciine, for the time being, to furnish energy from Grand Coulee and Bonneville for such social bene fits as REA cooperatives, or to provide power for public utility districts except where contracts j have already been signed. OPM can suspend the organic law of Bonneville, which provides a certain percentage of the gen erating capacity be reserved for co-ops and PUDs. There is too great a demand for power for aluminum and magnesium for defense purposes to permit any thing else to stand in the way. ... THE anticipated war depart ment activity in central Oregon. In the vicinity of Bend, is esti mated to cost $7,500,000 for buildings alone. From the num ber of troops to be stationed there (when and if) it will prob ably be an anti-aircraft battalion or several such battalions rather than an army air force. To light the cantonment the government may run a transmission line from The Dalles or arrange for the local power company to build up its load. By Frank Jenkins UfEDNESDAY'S big news Is " President Roosevelt's speech. In his speech he com mits the nation to these policies: 1. Freedom of the seas. 2. DYNAMIC defense against attack. J7REEDOM of the seas is a catch phrase. The United States has defined it in various ways at various times to fit var ious situations. Under one definition we sent our navy to the Mediterranean sea to clean out the Barbary pi rates by means of shooting war. Under another definition, we passed the neutrality act forbid ding American ships to enter war zones. These definitions are diamet ric opposites. 'TUESDAY night. President 1 Roosevelt defined freedom of the seas for us in the light of the present situation, as fol lows: "I say the delivery of needed supplies to Britain is IMPERA-J TI . I say this can be done. It must be done. It WILL be done." IF Hitler forcibly resists the de livery of needed supplies to Britain, the result will be shoot ing war. That is the situation in a nut shell. A FEW CEXTS In The ; Day's . News TIIAX A DOLLAR 7 T e (PrPini) buys tins great KENTUCKY Bourbon ! Check the proof (it's tVi at good" 01 . . . the superior flaTor (only Kenttiekv- di'tilleH bourbon riaa it) . . . the ( years of me llowjn t to Tonr taste), OLD YorE. X T. This DEFENSE against attack la fundamental American po icy. President Roosevelt pledge DYNAMIC defense. Then he de fines attack: "Attack can begin with ANY BASE which menaces our secur ity, north or south." Dakar, for instance. Or tha Azores or Cape Verde islands all mentioned in his speech. "FNYNAMIC" defense is a new ''term. There is no accepted definition, of it. This, however, is widely ac cepted military maxim: The best defense is good OFFENSE. Confederate General Forrest gave this definition of a good offense: "Git thar fustest with the mostest men." SUPPOSE Hitler seizes (or THREATENS to seize) Da kar or the Azores or Cape Verde islands or "any base which menaces our security, north or south." We can assume that "dynam- ' ic" defense in such an event would involve "gitting thar fust est with the mostest men." THAT would involve sending expeditionary force to foreign soil. t IN the light of these grave and possibly fateful definitions of national policy, we must ALL agree with the president's state ment that "NO DISPUTES OF ANY SORT must interfere with arms production." We can't fight without weap ons. AS a dramatic climax to the " President's speech, he pro claims a state of "unlimited emergency." What does that mean? In practice, not much. A state of unlimited emer gency presumably confers upon J the president all the powers he would normally be entitled to wield in time of actual war. In reality, he possessed prac tically unlimited power already, through delegation by congress. IT does, however, call attention to the gravity of the present situation. That is probably its purpose. Flight (V Time Medtord and Jacksoa County History from th files of th Mail Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY May 29. 1931. (It was Friday.) a High plane flight proves pos- sible in stratosphere despite low pressure and cold. Daughter of Kansas City may or, orf visit to France, drinkg champagne with mayor of Vin cennes. City to observe Day tomorrow. Decoration No campfire permits will b Issued in national forests until June 15. Talent district pear growers to hold meetings to discuss advis ability of advertising pears. Lamports leads in the kitten ball league. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 29. 1921. fit was Sunadv.) At exercises held Friday. 45 students of the high school re ceive diplomas. Field M a r s h a 1 Von Hinder burg still idol of the German people. Owing to melting snows In th hills. Applegate streams are still not at their best for fishing. Carnival on Front street is forced to close by a downpour of rain Saturday. Evangelist Bulgin tells audi ence sheriff is trying to catch him catching a fish illegally. Building revival underway here with many new homes be ing built. MORE proof) age eX ai-kr 1. a Ta- M. 21 ( IpintS)! V'2 '0 QUART J $ If $3