Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 15, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUn
KrroM Is Boathtra Ortam
mdm tmm Mall TritaM."
Published br
HBDFORD PMJNTIMO OO.
tf-lt North rir 4.1. phM 1141
ROBERT W RUHU Bdllor.
BRCST R- OtlTKAP, Muifir.
Btrd m aMend Hlw M Md
ford. Orotjoa, under Act mt March I, lilt
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Bt Mii IB AflVftRCB!
. Dillr b?4 aodr rw II W
Daily mu oBdi moathi... t.10
Daily and Sunday thr month .M
Dally and Sunday month... .fa
By Carrlar IB AdBea Madfof d. Aab
land, Caatral Polat. JaekMB-IIlt, Oolt)
HilL Rosuo River. Phala. TalaBt.
and mm moior rautoar
Datly BBd Suaday b yaar
Daily aad Suaday on moaih... .1
All torma e la Bdvaaca.
Official Pap of tba City mt MoSfardl
Official Paper ml Jachaaa) Cooaiy
MPMRKR OP THE ASSOCIATED PRKSS
Bocaivlaa Poll I 4 Wiro Sorrlra
Tho AawMlatod Praaa la IMlvIV
atltlad to tha uaa (or pa at leal l o of all
mi dlapairhaa cradliad to It or other
wit oradl'od to thta paper, and alao I
tbo local Bawt publlahad horalB.
All rlfhto for publication of apoclaJ
Slapatehaa harola ara alaa reeexved.
MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU
OP CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Repraaeottlo
WEST-HOULIDAT COMPANT. IHC.
Offleee In Now Tar a. Chicago. Dotrot.
Saa Prancioeo. Loa Angalaa. Soottlo,
Portia. - Lw Atlanta, VMciier.
pit
funis
TIM
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Pr
Ui indarV nd Rumania, moth-
eaten European land, have both
declared war on America. For
downright Insignificance and the
Nth degree of nothingness thli
beaU a Mexican hairless dog
baying at the moon.
CHEMEKETANS TO VISIT
CALAPOOYIA" Hdllne Salem
paper) O! those unpronounce
able Ruailan namesl
The Older GirU are itill ad
vocating a White Chrlatmaj.
They want to go out in yard
and pick -a Jonquil, while the
boy next door throwa a snow
ball at them and misses.
' '
Japan" diet U scheduled to
convene today. Owing to the
u.i. r.t inrA am of the prob
lems la to find enough to diet on.
e
Blackouts of lightning swift
nesa are held by army heads as
the need of the nation, and with
out any long warning whistles.
This will leave the fair sex.
without any time to powder
their noses, before the Stygian
darkness.
WAR TIME CHARADE
(Press Dispatch)
"Mexico, Mo. Said Col. C.
R. Stribling of Missouri Mili
tary Academy when Informed
of America's declaration of
war:
"It's as plain as ABCD
(Amerlca-Brltish-Chlna-Dut e h
East Indies) that the Jig (Ja-pan-Italy-Germany)
is up."
One of the lighthouse workers
Is flaunting a pipe built on the
lines of a young saxophone. The
first inclination of a beholder
is to agree to surrender If he
won't play it.
e e
The Corvallls Gsxette-Tlmes
reports: "Granta Pass Defeated
Worse Than 31-17 Score Would
Indicate," in a sports page head
line. This is a change from the
favorite alibi. "The score of 61
to 0 was closer than tha score
would Indicate."
"Anyway, here's hoping we
are spared the horrors of liberty
cabbage, liberty spaghetti and
liberty sukiyakl," hopes the es
teemed Bend Bulletin. To which
can be added the hopes, in pa
triotic fervor it wil not be
necessary to call hamburger,
'liberty sausage,' as in the par
ent World War.
Fashion says Its experts, "Is
undecided where the hip-line
will be located in spring styles
for women's dresses.' The hips
hsve long been regarded as the
best place for the hip-line.
...
CAUSE a CURE
Two glasses of beer Is as
much as a person should take
to keep sober.
A drink of liquor on top of
two glasses of beer will put a
person in a state of irreponsi
bility. A person should never
take more than one little glass
liMr in the cour. r
hour. It would be better to take
nune. I learned one time in the
'70s that smallpox was at large
In Milwaukee, Wis. My duty
was delivering goods. There was
guarantee. I stepped In many
houses, saw tha slrk with small
pox In bed. I did not get sick;
I kept my mouth washed with
liquor ever so often. I believe
It kept me Immune." M. Peter
sen In Sheridan Sun)
Closing Dm. lor C1.Mtn.tf M
a. Too lew tu Claeelfy MJO
Os atau maun was Ma,
War and the Rose Bowl
We grant no one should complain.
But it is a bit tough on Oregon State, to win the
first Rose Bowl title in its history, and then have it
snatched away on the basis of military necessity.
And with that loss goes from $50,000 to $60,000
in cash for the athletic treasury, more money than
the lads at Corvallis have seen since the first pigskin
met a hand pump.
However, there is no appeal from a military de
cision in time of war, and should be none. And we
are quite sure even the college officials who have
counted up the fat profit in advance, have registered
no complaint
. . . .
THERE is also a chance the game with Duke will be
staged elsewhere and some of the O.S.C. dreams
of sudden affluence may be realized.
The East-West game, scheduled for San Francisco
may also be taken elsewhere, so the Shrine hospital
will not have to draw too strongly on its reserve at
the bank.
UOWEVER, all that may be. If anything were
needed to show California is really in the war
zone, and no mistake, this ultimatum by General De
Witt should certainly supply it
We don't knbw what the general told the Rose
Bowl committee, probably the public won't be told
for the present at least, but we do know something
of the desire for outside tourist money in sun-kissed
Southern Cal., and the general's facts must have been
formidable and potent indeed to have resulted in such
immediate asquiescence without even ONE hum
dinger protest
For, as a result of this action, not only will the
HOLIDAY tourist business be completely non-existent,
but unless there is a sudden and ' unexpected
change in the situation, the entire winter season from
the vital standpoint of tho tourist crop will be a wash
out A ND no one in California wants that
Certainly there would have been a few rum
blings from California Incorp., and elsewhere before
this, had the commanding general not had some
thing on the ball more weighty than surmises, sus
picions and the routine maxims of "safety first."
THOSE reconnaisance flights of enemy .airplanes
around the Golden Gate, in other words must
have been authentic, rather than misreading of the
detector apparati, or panic in the department of communications.
Yes, fishy as it sounded at the outset, Jap air
planes MUST have been looking the California coast
over at least, and a bombing sortie must be in the
category of military possibilities, or the reaction to
the general's command would not have been so
meekly and completely quiescent
TXTA.R is what General Sherman called it But when
it comes to accepting a total loss in the California
tourist crop, only the belief a real and dire state of
emergency exists, could account for the general ac
ceptance of such a widespread economic sacrifice,
without even one word of protest
The people of Oregon, and the rest of the coast,
are certainly justified in the assumption that they,
too, are next door to, if not actually in, the FIGHT
ING war zone.
Far better to go TOO FAR in our preparations
and precautions, than find tragically and too late, we
did not go far enough.
Politics Out the Window
For many years we have received from Charles
Michelson, director of publicity of the Democratic
National committee, his weekly comments upon the
national situation with particular reference to the
virtues of the Democratic and the vices of the Repub
lican parties.
Never before have we felt the urge to reprint any
of Charley's outpourings,
convincing they have been.
But the following portion of his December 14th
offering is so factual, temperate and so timely, and
more important so non-partisan, that we feel quota
tion at some length is justifiable and desirable.
Now that we are actually at war, nothing is of Import
ance except the effort to win the struggle In the shortest
possible time.
Politics, like every other non-belligerent element tn our
system, is out of the window. Tha votes in the Senate and
House of Representatives testify to the unity of our nation.
Treacherous Japan has at least rendered us that service for
nowhere Is there a dissenting voice to the verdict that re
tribution, swift and total, must be visited on the bandit
Asiatic country.
There are no longer among us organlied groups, and
perhaps not even individuals, of the Isolationist, appeaser or
compromiser class.
it is Interesting to compare the vote that commits us to
this final determination of defense with the derisions of
Congress precedent to previous wsrs.
. . . .
IN the war of 1813. for example, the Senate's vote was 19
to 13 and in the House of Representatives 49 members
out of a total of 128 voted against the war. The struggle
between the States was proceeded with without any declara
tion but the debates indicated anything but a unanimous
vote.
The Spanish-American war was entered into by a viva
voce vote and consequently no accurate comparison can be
made, but the debates indicate that there were dissentient
members in fsct. one eminent Senator was referred to
satirically as the "Senator from Spain." In tha first World
war six Senators voted In opposition to our going Into it
and 80 House members likewise voted in the negstlve.
.....
THIIE declaration against Japan, on the other hand, reo
orded but a single vote In opposition. That vote was
cast by a gentle lady who voted the same way 34 years ago.
1 It has been her creed that pacifism Is pre-eminent article
however appealing and
of her faith and she could not vote for any war at any time
or under any circumstance.
'THE war In the Pacific was none of our seeking. We were
patiently and honestly endeavoring to bring Japan to a
reasonable settlement of the differences between the two
countries. When she joined the Axis, Japan became poten
tially our enemy. And so we were striving without threats to
persuade her away from that alliance when she fell upon
our outposts, killing hundreds of our people and doing
great damage to our equipment.
Had we been that kind of a nation, we had innumer
able opportunities to do on a larger scale what she did to
us. The diplomatic officers she sent over here to conduct
peace negotiations tell us unofficially that the outrage was
a greater shock and surprise to them than to anybody else.
That may be the truth, or it may be just another example
of Japanese duplicity.
In any event, we may be sure that in the conduct of
this war we. too, can be hard-boiled and will do whatever
is requisite to bring the struggle to a swift and victorious
conclusion. They have asked for war to the death, and they
are going to get it.
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letter, pertaining to pmonal health antf hygiene, not to disease
dtafnoeli or treatment, will be nitifri by Dr. Brady It a stamped self
adrlrtiMd envelop, is enclosed. Letters should be brier and written in Ink.
Owing to the lare number of letters received only a tew can h answered
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instruction,
address Dr. William Brady, 28 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
PHYSIOLOGY SEEMS INCONSISTENT
The somewhat battered and
mauled 1935 Webster, who sit-
teth at the right hand of Ol'
Doc Brady, has it that a doctor
is a teacher, one skilled In a
profession or branch- of knowl
edge, a learn
ed man and
no aracks from
my friends the
dentors, please.
A wise acre.
says Webster,
is one who
makes undue
pretensions to
wisdom. A
quack Is a
boastful p r ex
tender to med
ical skill, an
Ignorant or dishonest practi
tioner, one who professes skill
or knowledge in any matter of
which he knows little or noth
ing. It behooves a competent
epitheticlan to keep his termin
ology in order, lest he assign
his victim to a religious order,
for example, by calling him
fakir.
Notwithstanding frequent ad
monitions or reminders that
"signed letters pertaining to
personal health and hygiene,
not to disease, diagnosis or
treatment, will be answered
by Dr. Brady If a stamped self
addressed envelope Is enclosed,"
an unreasonable number of cor
respondents choose to ignore
the rules and submit detailed
histories of illnesses, symptoms,
their own and others' views on
diagnosis and treatment, and
then get indignant if Dr. Brady
fails to reply promptly with
diagnosis or treatment. But In
fairness to these readers, it can't
be done. Still I take great in
terest in correspondence from
readers and derive Joy from the
occasional good turn this per
mits ma to do for a corre
spondent. I like particularly letters from
readers who, without being at
all ungracious or unfriendly,
say frankly that my teachings
seem to contradict the teachings
of other doctors or health au
thorities, or even seem to con
tradict other teachings of my
own, and ask for further eluci
dation. For example, R. L. S. writes:
"I have learned much to the
advantage of my health from
your column, but I just do not
get your attitude In respect to
roughage in the diet. The other
day you said that by making
plain wheat a main part of the
breakfast one gets not only an
Increased ration of vitamin B
complex but also more of the
minerals and the fibre required
all resident aliens, enacted over
opposition and now in charge of
FBI. Is proving a boon in round
ing up the non-cltiren Japanese.
...
NAVAL intelligence and FBI
urged a congressional investiga
tion of un-American activities
among Japanese war veterans
with hundreds of members in
Oregon and Washington and
thousands tn parts of California:
another society which has been
buying Japanese war securities.
Japanese consular agents were
under suspicion by FBI and a
congressional probe of their
activities was desired. Tha sen
ate was willing, but time has
been wasted and the committee
has nothing to show. This spec
ial senate probe was to be sep
arate from the Dies committee,
which has a dossier on unde
sirable ciltzens in the northwest
" AT AtHE
I Nig L
(OoLtlnuedl Prom Page One)
Brady. M. D.
for good digestion and good
nutrition.' Doctors usually warn
against too much bran and vege
table fibre in the diet, yet here
you seem to teach that it is
'good for digestion.' This seems
inconsistent to me. I have to be
careful about my diet . . ."
You should keep on being
careful about your diet, if your
physician has so instructed you.
My teaching about wheat ap
plies to people not under med
ical care.
A larger proportion of cellu
lose (woody fibre) and other
"roughage" or "filler" than Is
present in the ultrarefined diet
of most Americans Is essential
for good digestion and good
nutrition. This is physiology.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Allergy
I must Ml you how grateful we an
for th. ad vie la your pamphlet -Relief
for Allergy." My son baring
"grass fever" In June was helped
greatly and t cry from th. rooftops
for th. relief I hsve had from dust
allergy which kept my now conatantly
dripping water and Irritated and
swollen nostrils. I have passed tho
pamphlet on to several friends and
they hav. alt obtained highly satis
factory result.. (Mrs. 8. 8.)
Answer Thank you. Copy of th.
pamphlet "Relief for Allergy" mailed
on request, If you provide atamped
envelop, bearing your address.
Years Of It
After reading your column for
years I hav. come to the conclusion
that you are a missionary tn the most
Important field of health. I have re
ceived much benent from your teach
ings and advice, for which I am
grateful. (B. J. T.)
Answer Thanks, and T hop. you
will continue to get a little amuse
ment out of It as you get accustomed
to looking to we what. It anything. I
hav. to say today.
Bad Habit .
Nearly two years ago I asked your
advice concerning hernia treatment,
t took the Injection treatment and
the result, hav. been highly sat la
factory. I wish to thank you for
recommending Dr. for this.
Pleas, .end m. Information concern
ing constipation. (M. O. H.)
Answer Send stamped envelop.
bearing your address, for pamphlet
on "Hernia." or for pamphlet on "Con
stipation Habit and Colon Hygiene"
Inclose to cents and the stamped en
velop, bearing your address.
Nicotinic Acid for Canker Horn
Can science do anything to prevent
or relieve canker sorest I suffer out
breaks of them repeatedly In the year
mil 1 mean Buffer. (R. C. W.I
Answer Take 200 milligramme of j
nicotinic add dally. Buenos Aire,
physicians report prompt relief of
aphthous stomstltts (canker soresl
from this.
(Copyright !Ml. John F. Dtlle Co I
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
honld send letter direct to Dr.
William Bradv, M. D tS ri
Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif.
dealing with communists, nazi
agents and a few fascists.
It is known In the capital that
the Japanese have comprehen
sive series of photographs of
Grand Coulee, Bonneville and
every other dam In that region;
pictures of power houses, eapl
tol buildings at Olympia and
Salem, of dock facilities at As
toria to Port Angeles, of out
standing buildings In all north
west cities, snaps of important
sawmills, bridges and railroad
tunnels. Scrapbooks of these
have been found in the posses
sion of truck gardeners. Charts
of the coast were purchased from
regular sources with no ques
tions asked. I
Japanese naval officers have j
worked as fishermen up to quit j
recently, familiartiing them
selves with harbors and coast
line. This has been disclosed In
all three Tacific coast states and
when reported on the floor of !
the house by a representative t
, from California two years ago. i
the revelation was brushed off
' as ridiculous, as wss the discov
ery that the "house boy" of
Charlie Chaplin was a Japanese
agent
i ...
I ITSCT are the elaborate plans
I of the railroads and bus lines to ;
' provide transportation for some ;
! 500,000 soldiers who were to i
i have started on a furlough for
j the Christmas holidays. Instead '
of being home with relatives. I
u.e troops win lie kept in c - v
and trains being assembled for (
the holiday rush may later be
used taking tha soldiers to the
west coast.
Now that the United States Is
officially at war, there will be
an Immediate effort to increase
the strength of the army tre
mendously. The national guard
and the selectees will have the
same standing aa the regulars
and marines, and can be sent to
any part of the globe (there has
ben a restriction to the western
hemisphere and American pos
sessions for guard and draftees);
to the Dutch East Indies, to
Singapore or any place where
they are needed.
...
THIS sudden spurt to expand
the armed forces, is expected to
cause the war department to caU
for contracts for the various pro
posed cantonments for which
plans have been prepared and
options on land taken. As quick
ly as funds are made available
these cantonments can be start
ed. The program also applies to
additional airports and new
training fields for pilots. None
of these training fields are in the
northwest.
In The
- .:. . . .. .... . - . . P?.
Day's
- News
By FRANK JENKINS
TPODAY'S (Saturday's) partlcu-
lar bright and shining spot
in the news:
America's fighting forces have
recovered from the first shat
tering shock of surprise and are
fighting doggedly, determinedly
and SKILFULLY.
...
IN the Philippines they are
bearing the brunt of a
MAJOR Japanese attack. What
happened at Honolulu was a
daring, hit-and-run exploit, not
(as yet) followed up. The at
tack on Manila is a sustained
affair.
One suspects that American
forces there are outnumbered.
They are far from sources of
reinforcement and supply. They
are putting up a REAL fight.
At tiny Guam, Wake and
Midway, we know only that
small American forces are fight
ing determinedly and effec
tively. ...
THE axis hope of catching us
off h.lance and crinoline
us before we can get going has
been shattered.
That Is the big development
of a hectic week.
...
ris still necessary to remem
ber that we are fighting in a
WORLD WAR. What happens
on ANY front concerns us al
most as directly as what is hap
pening' on our own particular
fighting front ,
Plenty is happening.
...
GERMANY'S early-tn-the-week
announcement that she is
withdrawing her armies in Rus
sia to "new defense positions"
for the winter foreshadows
something Just what can not
yet be said with certainty.
Moscow says Hitler's Rus
sian campaign has been crushed.
A Soviet communique today
claims 83,000 Nazis have been
killed and 23 out of a total
of 51 Nazi divisions have been
smashed, routed, surrounded or
forced to retreat in the Moscow
zone since November 16.
The Germans sre still falling
back along the Black sea.
...
OPINION in London is that
Hitler is pulling out of Rus
sia In order to hit harder some
where else.
A "British source" says today
that the German air forces re
ported to be withdrawn from
Russia may be thrown full
strength at the British Mediter
ranean fleet which has been
preventing reinforcements and
supplies from reaching axis
forces in Africa.
Hitler, watching the spectacu
lar successes of aircraft against
surface craft in the Japanese
war is expected to strike swtfUy
and with all his power against
the British in the Mediterra
nean. ...
TTHE British have been making
progress in Africa in this
week when our eyes have been
turned elsewhere. If Hitler is
unable to relieve his hard-
pressed forces there, he will
suffer another defeat
...
ERMAN forces continue to
mass In southern Bulgaria.
Bulgaria declares war on Brit
ain and the United States.
There is growing expectation
that Hitler will strike through
Turkey to reach the oil fields
of the Middle East.
Turkey is on an extremely
hot spot
. .
MEAN WHILE Tha Nether
" lands goes spectacularly
Into action.
A Dutch East Indies subma
rine, operating In the Gulf of
Siam. sinks four Japanese trans
rts carry :rt 4 000 soldiers to
the fighting in British Malaya.
(2) viYSt&r
0y XtlPPERS fR 40
Buy
Christmas
(The British at Singapore say
the Jap Invasion of upper and
middle Malaya has been sub
stantially checked.)
British and DUTCH destroy
ers pounce suddenly on two
Italian cruisers in the Mediter
ranean and sink one of them
and leave the other burning
from stem to stern.
...
AND In Washington Litvinoff,
the new Russian ambassa
dor to the U. S., says: "Japan
is the COMMON enemy. The
Japanese are axis gangsters."
With Hitler trying to make
some sort of deal for a Russian
peace, every word spoken by
every Russian official is full
of interest
Prospect
Prospect Dec. 15. (Spl.)
Funeral services of Mrs. Mary
Clausen, 86, mother of Mrs. Joe
B. Dobbyn of Cascade Gorge,
who died at Raymond, Wash.,
Dec. 8, were held at Coquille
Friday. Mrs. Clausen made
;many friends here, while stay
, lug at the Dobbyn home a cou
ple of years ago. Mr. 'and Mrs.
Dobbyn left for Coquille and
Marshfield Tuesday and return
ed here Sunday.
Women's Foreign Missionary So
ciety met at th. home of Mrs. John
Hakkerup, at Co poo. Thursday.
Due to the epidemic of measles
among th. school children, Christ
mas vacation start i a week early,
and classes will n. resumed Dec. .
Th. Prospect-Talent basketball game
was postponed to a later date, suf
fering from the measles at this time
are Miss Alleen Sherwood, high school
Junior, Donald Young, freshman. Bu
ll. Grieve, third grade pupil, and
Tommy Rlchey. second grade pupil.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hart spent Dec.
In Medford attending to business
and visiting U. and Mrs. Harry Stan
ley. Mrs. Ted Kelly arrived her. Thurs
day from The Dalles, to arrange the
shipping of their household goods
to that place, as Mr. Kellj. who has
been bucking log. for th. Oeorge L.
Jantter Lor. Co, leased a ra. eh near
Th. Dalles. On her return, ah. will
be accompanied by her little daugh
ter, Sharon, who haa visited her
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Palrchlld for th. past three weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. David Kevlll. spent
Thursday In Medford, .hopping and
attending to buslneM affairs.
Union Sunday School that meets
at th. Upper Rogue Orange hall, held
a rally day, Deo. T, and had as visi
tors the Beagle and Antloch Sunday
schools. A feature creating .much in
terest among th young people Is a
Bible quia, aa part of th. program
w? Sunday. Attendance last Sun
day wai over SO.
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Aroett and
children. Nola Jean and David, apent
Sunday at th. Sherman and Webber
home.
Communications
How About tha Blackout?
To the editor
I can't quite figure this black
out out. The officials in Med
ford talk over the air and tell
how the farmers get up at 4
o'clock In the morning, turn
their lights on in the hen house,
that they are not only endang
ering themselves but the whole
community.
And here we get up early In
the morning and the reservoir
and mills are lighted up like
Christmas trees. Seems to me
mere should be no exceptions.
Mrs. L. S. Lehman,
Route 4, Box 58-B,
Medford, Oregon.
Seals I
IN GOOD
TASTE . . .
O Years of experience have given us
a reputation for planning funerals
with tha utmost dignity and beauty.
Let us raliav you ef th details which
mount twice as high In tim of sorrow.
Th eost will b reasonable, the service all
you could wish.
CONGER
Funeral Parlors
Phone 1147
T1S W. Mala St
Flight o Time
Medford and Jackson Comity
History from the files of tha Mall
Tribune 10 and to years aio.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
December IS, 1931
(It was Tuesday)
President of China quits.
Tax millage in Jackson coun
ty to be lower than last year.
Candidates for sheriff bob
hins im dailv. and Is the most
popular office in county politics.
Experts predict Democrat
will find a presidential nomine
to back repeal of prohibition,
and will win unless prosperity
is restored soon.
Fair and cold. High 44, low
16 degrees. It was the coldest
day of the year.
Japan sets up puppet govern
ment in Manchuria.
City and county leaders be
lieve best way to curb local
radicals and their following "is
to ignore them."
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 15, 1931
(It was Thursday)
America's largest airship de
veloped engine trouble and first
cruising trip is delayed.
Wireless perfected that will
go through mountains and lo
cate metals.
Luxury liners battle for "lux
ury trade" flocking to Europe.
Light vote is cast in special
election voting bonds for fair
grounds improvements.
Fair and cool. High 60, low
23.5 degrees.
Yankee radicals in Russia in
great trouble, and permission to
return home is denied.
Ye Poets Corner
Black Out Call
When we hear the black out call
From our friendly fire hall;
Black out your lights, my neigh
bor. Black 'em out Out Out.
We'll be faithful to our call
And answer one and all;
And black 'em out.
Black 'em out Out Out.
J. M. Butterworth.
ALBANY FLIER KILLED
Portland, Ore., Dec. 15. (JP
Major Milton Kingcaid of the
Portland army airbase an
nounced today the death of
Second Lieut. Karl F. Leabo,
Albany, Ore., in the crash of
his P-43 pursuit plane at Paina
field, Everett Wash., yesterday.
SECR ETS Proof of L'nele
Sam's Increasing vigilance about
details which might serve so
enemy's purpose is this picture
of MaJ. Gen. William E. Shedd.
who commands the Panama coast
artillery. Army censor deleted
background, possibly of mans.
$.44 -: ,11