PAGE STX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, SUNDAY, JULY 6, 1941 &dford&&Trisuni Hmil Ik Mall IriMM." rMishr) M MBoroKo hhintiwo oa H-fT'll North fir L mo 1141 ROBKItf W. HUHU BlUof. IRNUT ft. OIUITRAP. Mnar. Cntr4 m mm iim naftar ! Mi lord. Oro. . Act a Uareh I. Ill uucHirrioN aatii Br Mall la Alvnai tHJlf and un-lar aa wr M Daily aid iunday HI moaLhi... Pally ao4 uti'lair tir mom ha. I ta Datlf o4 iunrtdr month... .? By Carriar la A1aooo Mevtfonl, Aah land. Coniral Point. JacstaonvHi. UoM JfllL. Rouo Wvar. Phooalt. Tataat, and aa motor routoai Dally aad Sunday n a yoaf. . .. Daily aad uodar ana moata.., .H All urtni aaah In adraoco. OrrtrUI tNDr at III U al Mod lard OfflcUl fapoff al Jarksma Couaty MKMIIKHUh IIUAMMIilAUII fUM Hocolvlna Vail lood Wlrt ttamra. Tho Aoaooiotod Proa ta aiolosivaiy oatltiod to tho boo for puoiiaatloa of an o dupatchoo orodtiod to u or othor viao eroditod to thla paper, and alao to aha local publish! harala. All nshia (or publlcatloa ( apaaiat 4lapathos aortic aro aiaa raoorvod. MBattVM OF UN I TED fRCMS MXUBKR Or AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advortialap Rapronontallvoo VMT-HOL1.IUA T COUPANV. IMC Offleoo (a No Tor a. Chiei, Detroit taa rraiioiasa Loo Anitlu aooitia. portlaad, ftt, Loaia Atlanta, Vaaaowar. B C. foil!! jtQitsoc"TIM Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry It li only 363 dayi until anoth er 4th of July, 172 until Christ mas, and approximately 70 until school opens, according to sta tistics compiled by the kids and their Maws. . Former President H. Hoover made a speech on the interna tional situation last week. Many honestly disagreed with him, and the majority from force of habit There was a general heglra, exodus, and skinning out for the tall timber, and the sad sea waves by the masses to observe their independence. There was the usual excess of bum driving on the highways and byways. The local boys who are mak ing good in the army will be here Tues. for three days, during which they will visit and par take of home-cooking. The song of the mowing ma chine Is heard in the rural re gions, as the tillers get ready to bring in the sheaves, for which they will get nothing. E. Carlton of the Table Rk. district and Shorty (Farm-Fresh) Morris area took in tha ball game Wed. eve under the arcs. ... , F. Scheffel, city supt., has re turned from Calif., where he studied army camps and how the arrival of more people in municipalities increases the pop ulation. ... A number of Jack. co. boys who attended the Beaver State agenda at Corvallls were elected to the legislature. They thor oughly understand, if this hap pens in real life, they will have to go. ... The horse chestnut crop of the valley is coming along fine. Like the weeds, they take care of themselves, and wind-up with a surplus. ... The sheriff's posse and mounts will adorn a parade in the me tropolis next week, traveling thither by train. The stock will ride In a special car. This will enable the nags to snort and cavort, and not act like they have been plowing all night, while waiting for the procession to start the usual 40 mlns. late. The C. Wig Ashpole boy Chuck is sitting up straight in the rear seat of new motor vehicle. ... G. Avcrill of the B. Fal!s hills towned in mid week. He report ed the vanishment of the late Elks' old tomcat left a "ketch in his windpipe." ... During June, 34 coupVs ft II victims of Daniel Cupid, and all were duly hitched without bene fit of shivaree. Pronunciatlon of cantonment and Russian towns, has local linguists stumped. It is betud - dling to find that Lwow is pro - nounced Lavuff. A number of screen favorites of both genders went through the valley the past week, caus ing mild furores and palpitation. ... There was not much traffic on the Main Stem Fri am., so good time was made by all. . The Grover Cleveland Conim twins can now stand up for a period, also a comma. Dicky can now be heard squalling for 'wo blocks, with the wind at his back. The Dubb Watson boy Edrt is going to work for C. Wing, as a brakeman on a milk wagon. The July 4th Speech THE speech delivered by President Roosevelt on Via ''EVmrrri" cVinnlH wmnve what. HnnVit. mnv nt.il! exist, that this country is really a participant in the World War No. 2, although no war declaration has been made. Not only does the President speak of the serious ness of the task, in which the United States IS en gaged, but he speaks of the impossibility of American survival, in a totalitarian world, and the necessity of pledging not only the national will, and labor, but the LIVES of all citizens, to the maintenance of Amer ican freedom and independence. THAT, we believe, is the first direct reierence to a vifiHTTMfl war. that has come from the White House, since the conflict in hv rhanre. the "Man from tuned in on this declaration by the chief executive of the United States, he. must naturally have assumed it was a pronouncement delivered by a country at war. AND why not? The puzzling thing is not, that President Roose velt spoke as he did on Friday, but that he has not been so frank and direct long before. The most likely explanation, in this department's opinion, is that the President believes, that until the shooting phase of the war starts in, a war declaration better be avoided. Not until very recently has he re garded such a phase as imminent. But with the entrance of Russia into the melee he does see fighting ahead. He, therefore, decided the anniversary of American independence, was an op portune time to warn the American people, that the talking phase of the conflict has passed, and almost any day now, the shooting may start. War With Japan? WHY should the entrance of Soviet Kussia cnange tho war nirtnre so vitallv. from the standpoint of the United States? The answer is Japan. In spite of Walter Lippmann's thoughtful prog noscis, there is no evidence of an American-Japanese reapproachment in the Pacific, as a result of Hitler's attack on the U.S.S.R. In fact up to the present time quite the reverse. The Japanese government, with characteristic indirection, refuses to define its position, but does admit, ft decision has been reached, and there is practi cally a unanimous belief . . . . . . . this decision is pro-nitier F this belief is well founded, then if and when a fiprmnn victory in Russia is assured, Japan will almost certainly clamp down a blockade on Vladivo stock and the far eastern Siberian coast. For as long as she remains a member of the Axis, she can't take the risk of any American interference in that area. More than that if any temporary armistice could be secured in China, Japan might even proclaim her own "der tag" and order her fleet, in an all-out effort against Singapore and the Dutch East Indies. In either event, a direct States would be inevitable, and a clash with gun powder in it. THIS is all hypothetical of course. And like Italy, Tnnnn ta Aaf arrinrr onv final rnmmittmpnt. until she is quite certain, in her own mind at least, that Soviet Russia's cause is hopeless. But there is eood reason the effect of Russia's participation, in the Far East rather than in Europe, that impelled President Koose velt, to abandon all reference to or hope for peace, in his Independence Day talk. Never QUR old pal "Wishful Thinker" bobs up again with his usual large dish of glad tidings. Germany is licked in Russia. The blitzkrieg that was to knock out Stalin down on some unpronounceable river, which is run ning red with Nazi blood and carrying log-jams of Hun corpses to the Black Sea. In another two weeks, the Red Army will spring its own offensive (which has been preparing secretly all this time behind the Stalin line), and Jlitlcr will be fleeing lor his lite to that bomb-shelter at Beivhtesgadon, etc.. etc., etc. As a matter of fact this department DOES feel more hopeful about this Russian clash than any of the preceding, and will not be surprised to see it mark the REAL turning point in But, on the other hand, W.T.'s line of talk so often, led Poland, that we are not going to fall for it THIS 1 time. j :VTnPF. -0 oro fhrmmh trvinir in rnlP our honps UN . " 7 ? oy tne wen Known oooisiraps. By the law of averages W.T. shouldn't be 100 wrong, ALL THE TIME, and this may be the time to prove it, but the pattern of this Russian victory, is too reminiscent of the victorious patterns that have preceded it. to got a rise out of this badly disillusioned department Iook up the record W.T. Poland, Norway, Holland. Belgium. France, the Balkans and Crete, the "filthy Huns" have been slaughtered by the car load in every campaign since the war started. there have been halts just like this one to mark the Ionic awaited defeat, yet when it i was all over and the score Europe started. In fact if, Mars" for the first time in diplomatic circles, that 1 a TT.1. J OImI-ah ana anu-umieu ounes. clash with the United to believe, that it was Again! in two weeks, has bogged N orld ar .No. ". we have really fallen for ever since Hitler invad- . added up, there was the homicidal Reichsfuehrer with another gory scalp on his belt I llE honestly believe there is more cause for optim " ism in this present mix-up than any preceding it, in fact the situation looks better and better as the struggle goes on. But this department isn't going to be caught out on a limb again. We shall give no more "three rousing cheers" until there is something final to cheer about! Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining ta Banana! fcealtn and hygiene, wit ta disease dlacno.li or treatment, will ba aniwerad 07 Dr. Brad; If stamped eelf addreaaed envelope Is aneloaad. Laltara should ba brief and written In Ink. Owing ta tha large nam bar or letters received only a lew can ba answered here. No reply ran ba made to oaerlee not eonfosmlng ta Instructions, Address Dr. William Brady, Ms El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. SALUTARY INFLUCN If you tell a lie often enough In time you will come to believe it yourself. Or as Shakespeare laboriously ex pressed it Like one Who having unto truth, by telling of it. Made such a sinner of his memory, To credit his own lie. Too bad cof fee was intro duced to Eng land long after S h akespeare's time. It would have enabled Mr. Shakespeare to do better work. There are several notions prevalent about the effects of coffee which seem to be based on nothing more than constant repetition in certain magazines, pamphlets and other publica tions by or for special interests interests that probably come to believe the misconceptions themselves in time. One such notion is that coffee makes you "nervous." For every individual who may feel more "nervous" whatever that may be when he or she in dulges in coffee, there are scores who need and benefit by the gentle lift they get from a cup or two of good coffee in the morning. Particularly people who have subnormal metabol ism. For them coffee is the ideal stimulant without a "hangover." Good coffee makes such folk easier to live with. It cheers them up a bit, which, heaven knows, their relatives and friends can stand. Another common misconcep tion concerning coffee is that it makes one "bilious", whatever that may be, or at any rate it is bad for the liver. The poor geeks who take all these imaginotions seriously seem to know intu itively things about the liver that are unknown to physiolo gists and physicians. Physiolo gists and physicians recognize no such state as "biliousness" In fact the trick diagnosis of "bilious attack" Is tantamount to a confession that the quack doesn't know or care what ails you and is willing to play along with you on any basis you like. But "biliousness" as a state of mind may be fairly ascribed to coffees to bad coffee, in many Instances. Webster says bilious In Th e News By Frank Jenkins A MER1CAN independence was "born July 4, 1778 16S years ago Friday. It was a dark world the infant was ushered into. ,i. a . CEVEN years earlier Napoleon Bonaparte haa been Dorn Two years earlier the ill-fated Louis XVI ascended the throne of France. Fifteen years after the Declar ation of Independence came the French Revolution. Sixteen years afterward Louis XVI and his queen Marie Antoinette were beheaded. TWENTY-THREE years later Napoleon became dictator of France and the French republic died. pOR 18 years after he became First Consul (dictator) of France. Europe resounded to the din of Napoleon's conquests. Na - CM tions fell on every hand as 'the greatest nation on earth, to they are falling now. put a stop to Hitler. Whenever he fought. Napoleon) This much is certain: He will won as Hitler has. Until the ! be stopped. LAST TIME. The lat time came at Waterloo, in IMS. That ended Napoleon. JtrOLEON was checked by Russia. It was his march to Moscow that first broke his power. Two years later he abdi cated as emperor and was sent to Elba. After 11 months he escaped and returned to t.-.ince In temDurarv triumDh for the I Hundred Dajs. Brady M. D. CE OF GOOD COFFEE means "choleric; ill-tempered" and choler originally meant bile, to which the ancients attributed anger or irascibility. That's Ol Doc Brady's reaction to crime in the coffee pot, all right. You see, all coffee is good coffee unless or until it is boiled. The instant coffee begins to boll the aroma or flavor begins to pass off into the ambient and only the bitter remains in the pot. Good coffee is an Infusion. Bad coffee is a decoction. An in fusion is a solution made by soaking in water, cold, tepid, warm, hot, but never up to the boiling point. A decoction is a solution made by boiling and then straining. QUESTIONS ANSWERS Calcium Feeding I have bean taking calcium tablet to round out my diet. I waa advised to take amall doaa or cod liver oil with the calcium tablet, aa vitamin D la neoeaaary for aaalmllation of cal cium. So I take about one-h.lt tea apoon of cod liver oil with three calcium phosphate tablet, after din ner dally. la this likely to have any 111 affeat (A K.W.) Answer No. Fcoda richest In cal cium ar. Hated in monograph -The Calcium Shortage" tor copy aend stamped Sc envelope bearing your ad dreaa. Heart Failure My husband haa what tha doctor calls alow heart failure. What foods will aupply vitamin B and vitamin A for hlmf (Mra. M C.O.I Anawer Plain wheat, wheat germ, oatmeal, rolled oeta, pork chops, atrtng beans, peanuta, green peaa, liver, tomato and tomato Juice, whole milk, dry powdered milk, skim milk, buttermilk, ham. cole alaw, squash are some of tha foods supplying vita min B complex. Egg yolk, cream, but ter, all klnda of cheese, dandelion greena, eecarole, aplnach, beet greens, tomato Juice, bananas, dried prunea, head lettuce, sweet potato, kidney. liver, carrota. are eome of the foods supplying vitamin A. Preparing for Maternity - My wife especta her first child In about three months. Her condition Is good except awellmg of the feet and ahe can sleep only four hours a night. A doctor advised her to He on her back with feet up against tha wall, but that see ma Impossible for her. (O.WJl.) Answer Then try elevating foot of her bed from alx to ten Inches (bloc its that high under lower lege of bed.) Send stamped envelope bearing your address and mcloa ten cent coin for booklet "Preparing for Maternity." Ed. Note: Persona wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., MS El Camlno, Beverl) HlUa, Calif. Waterloo finished the Hun dreds Days and finished Napo leon. His exile at St. Helena was permanent. MOTE this, please: 1 As long as Napoleon WON UNFAILINGLY France was FOR HIM through whatever of blood and suffering he led her. RUSSIA gave him his first set back, and France Immediately turned against him. He abdicated and went tamely to Elba. He came back from Elba and for the Hundred Days, while he was ON TOP, France was for him again. Came then Waterloo and DE FEAT, and France turned against Napoleon for good. A WORD here to Hitler: As long as you WIN, Ger many fill follow you through blood and suffering and death toward whatever goals you may lead her. When you begin to lose. LOOK OUT. IT was Russia, unable to stand against him in any single bat tle, that by her VASTNESS first weakened Napoleon. It might be Russia that first weakens Hitler. History often repeats itself. T may be reserved for L'S, the insignificant and unregarded 1 Infant of Napoleon's time, now For centuries the world has see-sawed back and forth be tween the ancient ideas repre sented by Hitler and his fellow dictators and the newer ideas represented by the nation that was born on July 4. 1776. but i alwa s the newer ideas have come out on top. ! They will come out on top I again. r Man Tnsune want ada. Communications War With Japan? To the Editor: If you were listening the other day to the short-wave broadcast in English from Japan you heard some thing like the following: "If the United States insists on filling the docks at Vladivostok with war supplies for Russia, Japan will feel obliged to take a hand." By that I feel that war between the United States and i Japan is certain as we expect, and rightly so, to give what aid we can to Russia. The advantages of a declara tion on our part are many. May I enumerate a few of the most salient? With the faU of Japan we are assured of: 1 The absence of any fear of aggression from the far east. 2 More and greater amounts of supplies of manufactured war materials for ourselves and the Britains which now are shipped elsewhere. 3 The unchecked flow of the raw and strategic materials from the East Indies to tha United States, Canada and other democ racies; The cut in the volumes of military supplies now sent to Chang Kai Chek in China. 8 The release of the Russian army now guarding the Russian boundaries against Japan for service against Germany. 8 The restoration of Chinese territory to a people who have put up a grand resistance against terrific odds. 7 The advent of a strong pro-democratic Chinese govern ment to police the far east. 8 The removal of threats po tential and otherwise to our island possessions and Alaskan territory. 8 The end of colonization ideas in South American repub lics by the Japanese. 10 The reduction of a top world power of a dictatorial type to that of a second-rate Balkan kingdom. 11 The opportunity to settle once and for all the question of Japanese infestation and aggres sion on the Pacific coast. 12 A training ground during the war. for the military of the United States. 13-rThe opportunity to de port all Japanese from the Unit ed States and colonize those who are American born in restricted areas. 14 The opening of, the great est market in the world, China, to American trade with the op portunity to establish this trade while other nations are unable to take advantage of it. IS The advantage of having struck the first blow and more than likely the deciding blow in the war to come. H. Wheeler Hunt, Medford, Oregon. President Can't Declare War To the Editor: Since the Stars and Stripes are still waving over "the land of the free and the home of the brave", please let me have my "say". In one of your editorials for July 1st you say that it is time now for the president of the United States, with the help of the best experts he can find, to decide now whether or not the U. S. should enter foreign war. As an afterthought you drag in congress and the Constitution. I gather that you want con gress and the Constitution brought into the matter, as an act of good form, a sort of old ceremony, that ought not to be forsaken, a becoming act of re spect to something that is old and once was loved. Yes, the Constitution is old and once was loved, it specifi cally invests the right to make war in the congress, not the i presidency. The brave and wise men who pledged th.ir lives, their for tunes and their sacred honor, to secure in independent govern ment for tnis country, refused to entrust to any one man this great power. They expected congress, to be a check on the president. They secured an in dependent Judiciary to apply the Constitution to both presi dent and congress. When our president takes office he pro mises to preserve, protect and defend not the people, not our wealth, not our religion, not our liberty but the Constitution a piece of paper with words written on It. The brave and wise men who endured the sufferings of the war of 1778. who were chosen by the common people, planned for us a constitutional govern ment not a government of persons. They placed the real final power of this land in the Constitution and placed safe guards around it. They aimed to prevent any one man from too much power. They invested our three great branches of govern ment with specific powers. They said congress should ma.ee and declare war. They had reasons POISON OAK? Try a bottle et ZEMACOL feo mo i a satisfied ar year eraeey rheetluil? refanded Oet a avtiw today at taTkk.t TMSirt. for planning this way, and the states ratified this great docu ment, and there are many peo ple today who are giving their lives, and having their honor besmirched to uphold it. I feel that the real dangers to our country today are invisible and intangible. One of them is the tendency to set aside our Constitution in every time of crisis. Won't others who truly be lieve in "Government of the people, by the people and for the people", speak? ANNA C. SHORT Lake Creek, Oregon. AT ' f!THE (Continued Prom Psga One) culture reports that the crops of youngberries, loganberries and blackberries are smaller this sea son than last. It was intended to buy up surplus berries and have them prepared for the British. The investigation dis closed, however, that there is an immediate market for the berries at good prices. . e e THERE Is a prospect of avia tion lines serving the Pacific northwest reducing their sched ules. The government is taking the airliners and sending them to the British. Eighteen have already gone, 12 must be turned over this week and 12 more by August 1. Thirty more commer cial passenger planes will soon be finished, will also go to the British, and orders for 43 more have been surrendered to the government. While American lines have complied with the commandeering, they feel they nave a kick coming when no Canadian line has, they assert, given up any planes and the British are maintaining their airlines in South America. Cur tailment of schedules will, natur ally, affect the airmail service. ... ADMINISTRATION forces have prevented the publication of a report by a house subcom mittee in which the higherups are severely criticised for the handling of war materials and stockpiles. Contents of the re port may be debated on the floor and reach the public in that manner. e THE president has approved TODAY - 3 DAYS! a-trrrTuIT u HI 1 I I II 1 - Ull' rla&is ar s Taafv-- sma -am am an w 4T i Alia W il KLLiM ; I t 1 Is s - , -a. BaaaTapm l "-TBsTasaeav- St .aa X. VI I 1 i j - vt SINGLE BILLED Bru of tt mor than two hour f brrath - taking nt?r talnmnt! Template h,w ear? T.iar t o-j WMie-s.ee Mtntr. Deors Ope a at I ts te and lr h to.,- a & V v L ' a...; roxy a WPA project for Oregon which would build fire trails and waterholes for stock in 18 counties the western half of the state. Counties include Douglas, Josephine, Lane, Linn, Lincoln, Marion, Polk, Clatsop, Clackamas, Columbia, Coos, Curry. Tillamook, Washington, Yamhill and Multnomah. Flight 0' Time Medford and Jackson Coonty History from tha riles af tha Mail Trtbane 10 and SO years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 131 Ot was Tuesday) Dan Collier while guarding his henhouse has pocketbook stolen from bedroom. Building permits in city show decided increase past month. Young men engaged in series of local burglaries and holdups paroled and sentenced by Judge Norton. State tax problems aired at conference in Salem with Gov. Meier. Mercury Jumps to 69 and val ley sizzles along with rest of state. Lightning starts five fires on the upper Rogue. Firebug sets one in the Beagle district. Cooler tomorrow. High 99, low 56. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 6. 1921 (It was Thursday) President Harding to address congress on soldier bonus bill and tariff measure. Democrats oppose latter measure, as hurt ing the south. Hood River posse kills ex-convict after he kidnaps woman and daughter and shoots hus band. Chicago gasps in torrid heat. Second cutting of alfalfa starts in Jacksonville area. New gun perfected by Edison will throw five tons ten miles. California woman tourist catches first trout of season in Crater Lake. More livestock needed in val ley to eat surplus hay, county agent says.' Fair and low 65. warmer, high 99, Ore and Bullion Purchased tMiuJud nor WILD B B R G BROS. SMELTING REFINING CO, OOau 742 Mob, S,.,Sa r km P1ati Swuh Sn Fr.nr.tr. lvjt- 1 u M I Etr.MNO tra open at S 4a IS I nr. tai tor l