Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 06, 1941, Page 13, Image 13

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    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.
This constituted an entirely
new policy for the military es
tablishment, and apparently
was designed to meet the com
plaints of many industrialists
that even though a labor short-
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