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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1941)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18.1941. UEDrOBDUtikTRIBUNI am tm SmkImt Or mmm llM Mall trUHMM.- MlDfURO PRIMTU-O OOL H-tf-t- Nrth rif at. fhoaa ROHCKf IT ftUHU ttHor IftNUT a OIUTXAP, Uin.ej Aa l4ploi NwiNMr, atarad m aaeaia aiaaa manor Had tare Ort. n4ar Aet af Maraa a, ItU UbaCHIKTlON ft A Tit 99 1111 la A4anai Dally ana ul ?aar M C!i a4 ldifii moatht... I Only tw lalii tStw mouth. 0 Dally aa4 aartay ana month... .It By Cmr la Advaaca Mattard. Ah Un4. Cantral Patau Jeltfon1l, UoM Hill, lUgaa ftJvar. Phaaala, ralaal, n4 aa matar raataat Dally aad aunair ana yar l.t Daily a4 Sunifar ana mania. .11 All lartn cash la advaaea. Offlrtal Vmp al tfta Cil mi M attar) OrrtataJ Paaar af Jacaaaa Caaaly HJUIHKaUl IH ASMM IAIkll PMaJta aaM Vail l.paiw tfrtrt aarla. Taa Aaaatiatatf Praaa leiiMiv!) aatltlatf la tna uaa for auaiioatioa al an wi aicpa tha r4ity1 la II at tH.r via i-adit la thia papar. ana alaa w tha laaai nawa aaaiihat Herat a. ah riahta for aitaitaa ar AlaaaUnaa aaraia ara ataa raaarvad. MBUBtSt. OF UNITED PHBaS alBMBCR OP AUDIT BORBAU OP CIRCULATION! AdvartiatMf lUpraaatuatlta WMT-HUU.IUAT COM PA NT. INC. Offiaaa Tor a. Oiaa IHlralt, aa Praaelapo, Lm A "aa, aa 1 1 tm. raruaaa. AL baai. Auaaia. B C 4t4$0CITIM Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Ptrrv German troop are reported maulng in Norway (or an In vasion of Scotland, via tha North Sea. They will have no better luck than Rudolf Heu, No. 3 Nazi, who tried the name thing Ingle-handed, by plane, and wound up on the business end at a two-tlned pitchfork In the hand! of a grim Scotch farmer. It ia 300 wind-swept, wave-towed milef ai a seagull flies, from Scotland to Norway, with mine fields galore, and British war ships beyond the fog-shrouded horizon. Der Fuehrer has all tha plans mapped out on paper, but tha battle will be fought on water, where tha British do best in war. And there must be ner vousness in Sweden. The hordes of Hitler on other occasions hava aimed on way and Jumped the other. What was thought to be a "clearing up" rain yes. turned out to be a starting-tn-agaln rain. With Civilization shivering In Its boots, word comes from Hol lywood, Constance Bennett, a beauty of the movies, unflinch ingly approves of "a mustached kiss." Tha lady figured it wasn't much of a kiss, but better than none at all. NEVER SLOWED HIS NOSE (Altamount (Mo) Times) "Allan Heldenbrand had an setting time during the windstorm Wednesday eve ning. Tha wind blew down his smoke house, killed a sheep, blew a hayrack almost one-quarter of a mile, lost his hat, blew a barn door off the hinges and upset his wagon." London admits tha aircraft carrier "Illustrious" was nearly sunk by German bombers Janu ary 10 last. The ship was at tacked six times, and Virginia Gayda, tha personal editor of B. Mussolini, dropped his type writer on a quarterdeck fre quently about the same time. Tha Elks old tom-cat has been missing for a week, and must be given up as lost, strayed, or stolen. It Is feared he wandered off Into the tall grass, and kicked tha bucket, unostentatiously. He was last seen with a small boy. who has not been seen since cither. TOO TELL TM "Did you work your hands to the bone that the wronged might have their own? Did you speak for justice openly loud and clear? What did you do for Peace when Peace was here? Did you toll and sweat for a plan to better the lot of man? Did you hold the soul above mere goods and gear? wh.t did vnrinfnrpr. when Teace was here? Did you say to the plundering few, "This is vile wrong you do?" I Did you rouse the land to free. .... mrn. from fcr? I hat aid you do for t race when Peace was here? you mount the hulP Did then trench truth with burning pen? DMyTeedomldVc7TrbU''T0Ur What did you"dof" Peace when Peace was here' (N.Y. Post) Work Horse Redeemed Omaha. Neb. (U.P Sam man put $2 on his work horse., ?.b! "ot. 1 ri"-. p'." 1r r' roiice station. Babe, hitched to Hitler WOULD make peace with Britain, and the two er wagon, was parked in a countries would tuiTi on Stalin. the one great fear iS7wntotoos.i:.hat has b(,pn brltin: the dream9 of the Soviet and -towed Babe in." .; despot ever fuice he secured master of the Kremlin ! A Minor AT the present rate Oregon will be completely rtloef Arori with milifarv acta rilicVimonra rif nna ertrt f.a-iwv.vu ...... "" or another. Portland and Pendleton have their air bases; Medford and Eugene are scheduled for their army cantonments (no one seems to know WHEN); Bend is looking forward expectantly toward an anti aircraft cantonment, and after considerable local debate the citizens of Corvallis have sent an official emissary to Washington, by plane, to see if they can't get what Medford and Eugene have secured. IT is all somewhat mysterious. For if half the things said about these army camps are true, they are far from an unmixed blessing. Yet every community having a population over 500 souls in Oregon seems to want one, and is eager to spend considerable cash and more energy in a frenzied effort to secure same. Perhaps thoRe who can explain why a moth insists upon flying into a flame, can explain this phenomenon. For some strange reason that flame must look extremely alluring to the moth, but when he gets out of it, he doesn't look alluring to anyone else 1 Then again it may not be that at all. It may be that all these reports about the dire effects of military camps are, like Mark Twain's death, greatly exag gerated, that while there are drawbacKs, of course, the benefits far exceed them. UESS we in Medford will just have to wait and see, assuming, of course, that those who selected this place for a cantonment site intend to build it before the war is overl A Major Mystery TR. KURT, VON FRITZ, university professor from Bavaria, now appearing before the Northwest Institute of International Relations at Reed college, tells Dave Hazen of the Oregonian he is certain Rudolph Hess was not sent to England by, or with the knowledge of, Hitler. To support this statement he declares (we quote) : "The third man of the Nazis was not sent to Britain by Hitler because the nazis made too many explanations as to what had happened to Hess when he went over the hill." Now, of course, a professor from Germany who only left that country three years ago, and has kept in close touch with friends there ever since, should know more about the Hess mystery than a small-town editor, or any other citizen of the United States, who has never been in Germany and bases his opinion only upon what he reads in the American press. Nevertheless the "Herr Professor" will have to present more convincing evidence than this, before this department abandons its favorite thesis, namely: that Hess not only flew to Scotland with Der Fuehrer's knowledge, but at his express order. AND why should the "many explanations" of the new infill, ucvroauij vii.-4.mjvc una llicui i The one thing Hitler would try to do would be to hide the true facts, particularly that Hess was sent by him, therefore that the "alibi" should change to suit changed circumstances would not be surprising at all as we see it Moreover, none of the explana tions was official, but came from various and sundry authorized spokesmen, who in view of the confusipn and excitement existing, might well disagree. AT any rate, we stick to our pet theory until our " error is proved, and it looks as though the real explanation of the greatest mystery World War No. 2 has produced will not be known until the war is over. FINALLY, the recent developments along the Russian border have strengthened this depart ment's conviction that Hess was not a fugitive from Hitler's wrath, but, as usual, loyally working for him. For, as before stated, our hunch is this was only another Hitler squeeze play. Obviously Hitler did not wish to offer a negotiated peace to Britain himsolf rmt ho rliri want raw ... ' ... , . u"c,eu uiis oasis, lu - Germany would not only stop fighting Britain, but would turn on Russia, and destroy the threat of communism, if Britain control of Europe. More n t. , ailow Britain to retain ner empire imaci, ana even support her against any threats by Russia or Japan. fN the other hand, if Britain refused this offer, v then Germany would by land, sea and air, but an ajiv tm, ppcuring a backlog in man power and . . T . , ... r. . , 'natural resources, which, even with maximum aid irom tne united Mates would render tne defeat of Gennany impossible, and the eventual destruction oi cngiann as a ino. i power in Europe cenam. . 110 better to offer this proposal than a known TV priemv of Russian communism like Hess, desiring , .'. , . - , ., . to save Europe and Britain from the red threat 'before it was too late, willing to break with his Nazi mt : onrvirOicV. it nnrl thna ns " he said) save humanity ? A"cl Wn ,,it,Cr (""eh a dangerous mission sacniicing prison pal. nis devoted "St. Paul" of the KMei JEAN'WHILE the same proposal, with reverse horse1' English, would he offered Stalin. Unless he End came promptly through Mystery nfforori Anrl ho wantoH ..... wii. would recognize German than that Gennany would , not only launch an invasion would join with Russia, as ' ""' Pttcr trU?t t0 CanT mlt than his loyal and self- neioved Kudolpn, tne Nazi revolution? with all aid desired then Personal Health Service By William Stfn4 letfm pertaining te ptnonal hmlth ana hrglene. net to dliease Staff noali er treatment, will be anseerci ar Dr. Brady if a stamped self addrawea enrslope Is snrloKd. Letter sheald be brief and written In Ink. Owing te the lart number of letters renlred enlr a ffw can be answered here. No reply ran be mads te qaerlet not conform I nf te instruction. Address Dr. William Brady, ZS El Camlno. Bererly Hill. Calif. THE rOOD The following facta may seem self-evident to some, but a thou sand queries daily indicate that they are news to the major ity: 1. While the nutritive value pertains to the supply of the body's require ments of min eral elements, v 1 1 a m i n s, building and repair or growth mater ial (nitrogen), as well as fuel for the body's heating and power plant, the "fattening" or "non-fattening" character of any item of food depends mainly on the number of calories yielded by the amount of the food taken. 2. The number of calories yielded by any item of food de pends oh the proportion of the three classes of food material composing the food that is, protein (nitrogenous material), carbohydrate (sugars or star ches) and fat. Protein, such as white of egg, lean meat, curd of cheese or milk, and the protein component of wheat, beans, peas etc., yields 4 calories per gram, or approximately 12S calories per ounce. Carbohydrate, that is, any form of sugar or starch, such as the sugar in ripe fruit, cane sugar, beet sugar, maple sugar, honey, milk sugar, or the starch in flour, potato, wheat, beans, unripe fruit, yields 4 cal ories per gram, the same as pro tein. Fat, whether animal or vegetable fat or oil, or fish oil, yields 9 calories per gram, or approximately 280 calories per ounce. 3. Any kind of fish oil or shark liver oil would yield app roximately 38 calories to the teaspoonful (average teaspoon ful equivalent to 4 grams) If all of It Is digested. A glass of skim med milk would yield 85 calor ies. .Four tablespoonfuls of whole fresh sweet milk would yield 40 calories. 4. Lemon Juice, which so many uninformed or misinformed lay men imagine is "reducing" (Continued Prom Pas One) Spokane or on government property at Grand Coulee. Ad ministrator Raver is said to fa vor Spokane. The reason why OPM favors a plant near the power site is that a transmission line from Grand Coulee to Bon neville, or any other site, would require almost as much alumi num as the plant could make in a year. The best lines (and the government wants the best) are of aluminum. A line, also, would require about a year to con struct. Considering these fac tors, OPM and perhaps a cou ple of railroads serving Spo kanewant the federal plant as near to the Grand Coulee bus bars as possible. No hint has been given by Ickes as to his preference, but it Is a good bet that he is con sidering Cascade Locks. ... WHEN the government built powder plants, etc., it engaged the Duponts to operate them. The government-owned alumi num plant will have to be con ducted by experts, and there are very few in the United States. Reynolds Metals Co. has hired away only one of the Alcoa experts and has engaged a refugee from France as a con sultant. The Bohn Aluminum St Brass Co. has specialized in scrap aluminum, buying a little virgin Ingots to sweeten up the scrap. These are the three out fits working with aluminum and one of the three (OPM says it should be Alcoa) will be con tracted to operate the govern ment plant. If Ickes has his way It will not be Alcoa. There are no government employes fa miliar with the process and should Ickes maneuver for the government itself to operate the government would have to bid for some of the Alcoa experts, and the government does not pay as much for skilled talent as a private company. A few days ago Mr. Bohn was in Portland (his fsbricating plants were In the midst of a strike at the timet viewing the situation. If he brings an oper ation into the Columbia area he may pick Portland. It was Bohn who Inflamed the free power for-nothing group when AT flTHE Brady M. O. YOU CAT yields 12 calories to the ounce, orange Juice 16, milk 20, grape juice 25. So lemon juice is merely less nourishing or less "fattening" than the other items mentioned for comparison. B. Too many people still seem to think "dieting" means only restriction of diet for the purpose of reducing. Today j physicians prescribe the diet as part of the treatment for many different conditions. 6. The total of calories yield ed by the food consumed and not the kind of food the individ ual chooses, determines whether a particular regimen or diet is ! fattening, a maintenance regi men (that is, suitable to main tain normal weight) or one which will Increase weight. 7. And so, darn It. girls, we get right back to the d car bohydrates the delectable car bohydrates I mean to say. In the next talk on weight control we'll consider why so many nice girls can't take the d carbohydrates and can't let 'em alone. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Mumped wiu you kindly explain how any one. especially any on who has se ven anemia and a delicate stomacn. can poatlbly eat or swallow raw llTer. aa a remedy? W. W. F. Aruwer I hare often wondered about that myself. In fart I hare been Intending to try a raw liver cocktail tome time, but X never aeem to think of it at the right time. Liver eitract may be administered by Intramuscular or hypodermic Injec tion or taken by mouth In various dlagulaea. Send ten cents coin and atamped envelop bearing your ad dress, for latet edition of "Blood and Health." which Includes a suggestion for a pleasant way to take liver, Iron and vitamin B. Flitnla la there a way to remove or cura fistula other than operation? W. N. Answer I know of none. A phy sician aklllrd In ambulant treatment may successfully treat fistula pain lessly in his office, even tho the treatment Is surgllal, as a nils. (Protected by John T. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to ' communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 16S El Camlno. never!) Hills. Calif. Bonneville was building by say. ing he was willing to take its capacity for an aluminum plant. (Capacity then in sight about 70.000 kw.) An outcry imme diately arose that industry was trying to rob the people of the Bonneville cheap power. The waffle-iron crowd now realize that the government's power is going to industries instead of electric toasters. SENATOR HOLMAN offered an amendment to the strike leg islation in the senate which was rejected because the country is not yet at war. Under the Hoi man proposal strikers at a plant filling war orders would be sent to the army or navy (depending on which orders the plant was working) If of draft age and then perform whatever duties of a military or non-military char acter the secretary of war or secretary of the navy directed. This would permit the secretary to assign the striker to the plant and to the very machine he was! working when he struck, and J pay the army wage of $21 a month, Bnd not S10 a day. The Oregon senator thinks this Is a good solution to end the strikes and provide necessary man i power when a plant is com mandeered by the government. The draft-age strikers would be about 80 percent. Communications Walt Until They're Hip To the Editor: I have wondered many times why grocery stores and trult stands sell green cherries. This is especially true of Bine cher ries, which are ordinarily on sale when they turn red. if left on the tree until they mature, they are of a very dark choco late color, nearly black, and twice as larse as when they first turn red. Nor are they really good to eat until thoroughly ripe. The Bing is the best keeping variety, and will be excellent two weeks or more after royal Anns are gone. The writer of this squib was awarded a gold medal by the Panama Pacific exposition in 1915. for Blng cherries grown In Jackson county. They were well ripe when picked and shipped, and one box was kept for a month In the Horticultural building at San Francisco, test ing their keeping qualities, be fore the judges awarded the medal. ONE WHO KNOWS HIS CHERRIES. (Name on file.) CVoelns time for T"0 Late to Cas Mfy Ad is 1 'SO p m re MU Tribune want ads. To You From Washington by Ethel yn Evans Washington, D. C (Special Correspondence.) This national capital city, quite properly, is the first to lead off with an "all out" registration of citizens for volunteer patriotic work of all kinds. Our local defense council is urging every man, woman and child in Washington to fill out a card stating exactly what work each can do and how many hours or days per week each can give, listing a first, second and third choice of work. These sta tistics will be tabulated and vol unteer work assigned according ly, when need develops. Including Mrs. Roosevelt, thousands from every stratum of the population trained and untrainedare flocking to our registration booths. The First Lady hadn't heard about It until we told her at the recent press conference. She admitted then that she really belonged to Duchess county, N. Y., her "per manent" home, when and if they started such a registration. But In the meantime she has registered here at the Y.W.C.A. for work In "public relations." It was unnecessary, however, for her to state how much spare time she would have to devote to the work, since all of her ac tivities in the capital would come under that category. Much of the Information ob-t tamed through, this registration will be a duplication of other group surveys already going on. To mention only the women's organizations, the D.A.R. months ago began a survey of its mem bership to ascertain what work each could do. In fact, the Daughters already are busy on many defense projects. Likewise the B.P.W., and all other service clubs, are doing the selfsame thing. The new president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs has called a meeting of delegates from all women's clubs and organizations for the pur pose of coordinating defense work by women. Defense work, by the way, now includes tasks similar to every chore of our daily lives. All of these group efforts also have a definite tie-up with the recent nutrition confer ence of government officials, educators and social welfare heads; and to the big defense housing conference now In pro gress at a local hotel. At present, the welter of over lapping defense surveys and the many organizations, committees and commissions present a pic ture of the utmost confusion and inefficiency. But, when the su preme civilian defense commis sion, under Mayor La Guardia, starts operating on a nation-wide basis, this mass of information and these thousands of organ ized groups who are willing and anxiqus to serve should coalesce Into an effective machine for carrying out some comprehen sive plan to meet any present or future emergency. ... THE STRIKE SITUATION was brought up again and again at our last press conference. Mrs. Roosevelt did not discuss it at length, merely Insisted that it was too bad and very sad to find one element Jeopardizing the work and welfare of an entire group of the population. Replying to questions concern ing efforts to purge radical ele ments In various groups, she felt that every organization should constantly endeavor to build up and Improve its mem bership and to progress. Upon direct reference to deposing communists in the C.I.O., and her help as a member, Mrs. Roosevelt explained that she, of course, was only one member of i one group of the C.I.O. The! Newspaper Guild. I DIANA HOPKINS, mother- i less daughter of the president's1 No. 1 man. Harry Hopkins, camel running from the big family drawing room on the second! floor of the White House, past; the door of the Monroe room i where the press conference was being held, and on Into the corri dor sitting room In the East Wing. Diana was wearing a pink gingham dress and white san dals. She has grown very tall and self-assured since the White House became her only "home" a number of year man That before Mr. Hopkins was secre-j long illness and subsequent ap pointment as the president's right-hand-man. Mrs. Roosevelt is very fond of Diana. She visit ed the youngster at her school this past winter and takes her to New York when Mrs. Roose velt, the president and Mr. Hop kins are at the Hyde Park estate. ... PRECAUTIONS: Not only are; all newswomen (no matter how well known) required to show identification cards at the front j door of the White House these1 days, but two "armed'' guards I are the first to take a peek atj our credentials. This Is In addi tion to the colored doormen and a head usher or two usually floating around. This is absolutely the proper thing to do, of course; but some of tha writers wonder if it would not be well if proportionate measures wera Uken to guard vital building 'and production from disgruntled radicals and fifth columnisti. According to daily news accounts and also re port of tha Dies committee, suf ficient precautionary measures have not been taken in the past. :. In',' The 'Day's:';.-;:;News; By FRANK JENKINS THE air today (Tuesday) is still thick with rumors. Tales of Russian mobilization ar now reaching Finland and Scandinavia and causing anxiety there. Several German divisions are reported stationed in Fin land. A Finnish newspaper In Hel sinki says the military situation in the Baltic is "ripe for sur prises" likely to affect the Finns, j MORWEGIAN sources in Lon- ' don are hearing persistent stories of concentration of large German forces on the Norwegian west coast. Other advices reaching Lon don tell of steady streams of German troop trains and sea going transports moving toward the coastal bases. All Rumania is ordered black ed out for the first time since the general blackout was lifted a month ago. w HAT does it all mean? Well. It is pretty certain to mean that something BIG is in the wind. . . . OEM EMBER at this point that surprise Is now, always h been and probably always will be one of the Important elements In fighting of ANY kind. Ring fans are fundamentally familiar with the fact that the fighter who "telegraphs his punches" doesn't get far. When a telegraohed punch arrives, the other fellow is pretty certain to have the threatened place cov ered. It works the same way In war. So when a big drive Is in the making the maker of it resorts to every possible device to confuse and mislead. WITH eyes on every side, with spies planted In almost every conceivable spot, with modern communication facilities swift and efficient, even the most rigid censorship can't wholly cover no the troop move ments and other prerjaratlons necessary for a big push. Rumors are BOUND to get out. One way to cover uo is to Inspire so MANY rumors that It will be hard to sort out from the mass those that are really significant. For that reason, the fact that the air has been full of rumors for days rumors of every sort, coming from every direction Is fairly dependable evidence that something Important is brewing. Trying to guess what is like trying to pick a needle out of a haystack. e rVTEWS can be censored. Rum ' ors can be manufactured. Propaganda can he (and con stantly IS) peddled. But the map doesn't lie. Britain holds Egypt and Suez and Iraq. Russia holds the Ukraine with its wheat and Baku with Its oil. Turkey holds the key to the land gate to Iraq and its oil and to Suez and Egypt. Your map tells you this, and what It tells you can't be cen sored or covered up by false rumors and propaganda. ... PUT this down In Rvntr your day Turkey Is In for trouble. If the Germans can't get around Turkey by promises or 1 By threats or by compelling Rus sia to bring pressure to bear. Of Kentucky's this is the m-Boum-iicriouiioi I .- .aaa- Turkey will sooner or later be the bloody scene of another blitz krieg, f AND you might as well put this down: Russia has what Germany wants food, oil and war ma terials with which to defeat the purpose of the British blockade. If Russia doesn't coir.e through voluntarily with what Germany wants, what she has will sooner or later be taken by force. Flight 0' Time Medford and Jackson County History from th files of the Mail Trlbun 10 and to years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 19, 1931 at was Friday) Amelia Earhart, famed wo man flyer, given commission reprimand for aerial mishap. Heat wave costs five lives in 4 mid-west. Many applicants for Job as storekeeper at Crater Lake. Presentation of Passion Play at Ashland well attended. President Hoover to take steps for "economic rehabilitation of Germany." Medford guardsmen gain weight at Camp Clatsop. Fishing improves at Diamond Lake. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 19. 1921 (It was Sunday) America announces she will not participate in the League of Nations deliberations. Every section of Jackson county pledges support to Ash land's Fourth of July celebra tion. Babe Ruth hits 24th home run of year. Ralph Hand defeats Basanta Singh in wrestling match at Gold Hill. England, France and Italy de mand that Greece mediate war with Turkey. Sen. Norris of Nebraska at tacks British treatment of Ire land. John L. Lewis to oppose Sam Gompers for AFofL. presidency. VISUAL EDUCATION Southern Oregon College of Education. Ashland. June 18. (Spl.) A visual education clinle will be held at the Southern Oregon . college of Education, Thursday, according to Dr. Walter Redford, president. Ells worth C. Dent, national educa tional director of R, C. A. of Camden, New Jersey, will be in general charge. Accompany Mr. Dent is Joe Burke of the Erpl Classroom Films, Inc. The pro gram will start at 10 a. m. with a prevue of new classroom films which will be followed by an address by Mr. Dent on "Various Kinds of Visual Aids and Their Uses." A demonstration of equipment and a general discus sion of the visual aids and their uses will follow. Elementary and secondary school teachers, principals, sup erintendents, members of the P.T.A., and other interested citizens are cordially Invited. EMPLOYMENT OFFICES WILL AID IN DEFENSE Salem. June 18. (,p The state employment service will permit its offices throughout the state to be used by county de fense councils for enrolling the civil reserves from June 23 to 28. State Civilian Defense Co ordinator Jerrold Owen said to day. The county councils, however, may use additional nffir if th desire. Misses Part of Ear Columbus, O. 0I.R) Strange things happen In Columbus taverns. John Haas. 25, Colum bus, reported to police recently that while in a grill, a stranger bit off a part of his left ear. Haas wa unable to describe his assailant to police. finest Bourbons PraR!AM mum uvu 81.05 0rt JJ2.05 scxix 0.ST.UMI coeoox. V