Medford Tribune Full Associated Press United Pru Thirty sixth Year MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1941. No. 66. Second Section Four Pages FIVE-DAY WEEK FOR BUSINESSMAN DOCMHDME Morning In Bed Once a Week Would Help Ambition Shortens Expected Span Br Harold C. McKlnle Cleveland, June 6. (IP) The world would be better off If man had the habit of lying In bed one morning each week. That's the comforting concept of noted physician who today told the American Medical as sociation that ambition is short ening the business tycoon's life span. Ambition and "the strenuous life" are just as hazardous to the executive's health as his obesity and excessive use of to bacco and alcohol, declared Dr. Edgar V. Allen, chief of the medicine division at Mayo clinic. Lacks Long View He proposed a five-day week, eight-hour day program for business men. "The business man falls to take the long view of life," Dr. Allen asserted. "He plans his life, aside from his annuities and Insurance, as if he were to live forever. So he works hard to accumulate funds with which to play tomorrow. "All too frequently he lies mumbling and mutterhif In a hospital bed, panting his life away as a result of high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries, or he stumbles and falls from apoplexy, or after a shudderingly severe episode of cardiac pain he Is hurried off Into the sleep from which there Is no awakening. "Could man see how small, how insignificant, how unim portant his individual life is, he might shape it so that he would achieve more of happiness and content and less of material suc cess and perhaps ill health." I age was developing In many categories of skilled workers men qualified In those skills were being drafted Into the army. The release policy applies to enlisted men of the regular army, to selective service train ees and to national guard mem bers in federal service. Requests for releases must come from former employers. REV. WESTON TO SPEAK AT EAGLE POINT SUNDAY Eagle Point, June 51. (Spl.) Rev. Luther G. Weston of Medford will be guest speaker at the highway tabernacle here Sunday at 8 p. m. At 11 a. m.. Rev. M. R. Brunswick, the pas tor, will speak on "Not Far From the Kingdom." r Special vocal selections at both services. Special orchestra selections in the evening. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m., classes for all ages. Children and young people's church, 7 a. m. The public is cordially invited. Rains Help Pendleton, Ore., June 6. (IP) Umatilla county water pros pects were changed from poor to excellent by heavy May rains which prevented the usual heavy drop in the level of Mc Kay reservoir. LOOKOUT POSTS IN 1 DEFENSE TO BE SET UP Selection and Training of Volunteer Force Begins On Two Coasts June 15 Washington ttJ.R) An "air craft warning system" will be inaugurated June IS by the army air corps along the At lantic and Pacific coasts, with civilian volunteers as "spotters" of "enemy warplanes" and chart ing their flights for counter attack by American ships. The system will be extended to other areas shortly thereafter. Director Frank Bane of the office of emergency manage ment's division of state and local cooperation called on offi cials of 45 state defense councils in the east and west coast areas to enroll volunteers. They will receive training as "spotters" at strategically locat ed observation posts and for jobs at filter centers, where non essential information from "spot ters" will be discarded, and at information centers, where the flights of "enemy formations" will be charted. Must Be Citliea Bane issued the first in a series of "warning system" book lets which said that all volun teers will be subject to investi gation and confirmation by mili tary authorities. "It is the responsibility of the local defense council to see that all persons referred are loyal American citizens, as work which will be done at filter stations and information centers will form a basis for operations of the air force, it said. Observation posts necessarily would be manned 24 hours a day and approximately 12 or 16 observers all men would be required at each station, the booklet said. Young Women Wanted The "inside work" at filter and observation stations is of a type "for which women are par ticularly adapted," it said. It is "not desirable to have a general registration of citizens" for this work, it added, suggesting that persons qualified as telephone and teletype operators, radio technicians, tabulators, typists, stenographers, chauffeurs and draftsmen were particularly needed. "In view of the fact that volunteers to be trained for this inside work may be enlisted for full time operation In the event of an emergency, it said, "the war department particularly re quests that women selected for this training and operation be healthy and alert, preferably about 25 years of age, and com paratively free of family obligations." WREATH FROM HITLER 10 RED SHIP LEAVES Doom, Occupied Netherlands. June 6. (IP) In Germany's of ficial participation in funeral ceremonies Monday for ex-Kaiser Wilhelm II, German Air Force General Friedrich Christ iansen, military commander of The Netherlands, will lay a wreath on the grave on behalf of Adolf Hilter. Arthur Seysz-Inquart, Ger man head of the civilian ad ministration of the occupied Netherlands, also will attend the services. Portland, Ore., June 8. (IP) The Russian merchantman Shat urstroi put to sea today with the fifth cargo of American made machinery destined for Russia this year. Two other cargoes for Russia are being assembled and will be loaded aboard the freighters Orochon and Bolshoy Shanter, now in drydock here. One of the five cargoes was aboard the Vazlav Vorovsky which was wrecked at the mouth of the Columbia river. It is being salvaged. Closing time tor Too Lat to du ll! y Ad. It 1:30 p. m. No Stampede Bend, Ore., June 6. (IP) Directors said Bend's Mirror Pond pageant and stampede, us ual July 4 event, would not be held this year because of lack of interest. They hope to resume next year. COOL ITIjlKSj (jjgjj This finer tea iced adds deli cious flavorful refreshment to many happy summer occasions. I Washington, June 8. (IP) The distinguished flying cross, j one of the navy's most coveted decorations, was presented by Secretary Knox today to Lieu-1 tenant William W. Lowrey and j Aviation Chief Machinists Mate John R. McCants, test pilots at ! the San Diego naval air station. ; In the secretary's office, sur-! rounded by navy and marine , corps officials, Lowrey and Mc Cants fidgeted self consciously as Knox read to each in turn the long citation for extraord inary heroism. It recounted the details of their aerial rescue of Lieutenant Walter S. Osipoff, a marine corps officer whose partly open ed parachute became entangled In the plane from which he jumped and left him dangling in the air. Washington, June 8. (IP) The war department announced today that soldiers needed be cause of their special skills to fill key positions in defense in dustries hereafter may be re leased from military service to return to civilian employment. 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