Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 28, 1941, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1941.
MEF0RI)2&TllIBUKI
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Dally Biropft atarday
MBDPORD PRINT1NO CO.
tT-tt North rir It. Ptiea SKI
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BRNKMT ft OIIJITHAP. Hanfr.
Am In4pndnl Nwipapr.
Enter! aacond claaa matter at Mad
(ard. Oroa. aadar Act f Harea t, 117ft
SUBSCRIPTION HATES
By Hall la Advance:
Pally and Sunday aaa year M
Pally and Sunday all man t ha... .
Daily and Sonday three month!
Daily and Biiortay n month... H
By Carrier la Advaaca 'Medford, Aah
land. Central Point. Jaekaoavllle, Qold
HUL Roma Rtvar. pheeata. Talent
and ea motor routeei
Dally and Sunday one year
Dally ann aunnay one monin
All terma caah la advance.
Official Papor of tne City el Mrford
Official raper at imtummm mmir
IIFHHfR OP THB AStMM'l ATBII PRKS8
RarelTlM Pall ma Wire arrvira
The Aaaoctated Preaa ta eiclualveiy
entttled to the uae for public! loa of all
oawa dlaoaichae eredtted ta ll or other-
riee eredi'ed ta thte paper, and alee ta
the local newa publlahed nereia.
Ail r'Thte for publlcatlea ef epeelai
dlspatel.a herein are alaa raaeryed.
HCUBKR OP UNITED PRESS
MCIIRKR OP AUDIT flHREAU
OP CIRCULATIONS
Advartlatnt Representative
WEST-HOI.I.I DAT COMPANY. INC.
Offieea In New Tor It. ChlcaRo. Detroit.
Baa Pranlece. Loa Anialee. Heat tie.
Portland. At. Loula. Atlanta. Vancouver.
H C
hi
Ml
ATI
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Parry
a H.ur Vnar MmH Thurs.
and several citizens have imp
ishly itarted sprouting saintly
resolutions to lead better lives,
cut out some of their minor
meanness, and drive carefully
in 4142.
Snow fell on yon high hills
during the past week, causing
the Older Girls who wanted a
white Christmas, and orchard
ists In need of Irrigation water
next summer to rejoice. Skiiers
also felt good, and prepared to
answer the call of the Great
Outdoors. Ice froze on neighbor
hood mud puddles.
Some of the leading experts
now think A. Hitler of Ger
many is crazier than a loon
ever dared to be, and fear he
may commit suicide.
8. Morris, the T.Rk tiller,
who has been away from his
smiling acres for two months, is
now town-broke, and running
around without a necktie on,
Most everybody showed up
Fri. admitting they ate too
much Christmas dinner,
.
The first robin in long time
showed up on the cthse lawn
over the week-end, and left the
impression he wished he hadn't.
The dying squeal of the fatted
hog is heard in the rural re
gions, as the annual hog-kllllng
season gets under way.
The Jack Walker boy, J. Tan
nehill, made social calls Thurs.
and had trouble keeping his
pants up. The constantly Im
pending tragedy fretted his
Grandpaw no end and then
some.
The po. crew heaved a sigh
of relief, and their last Yule
mall Fri. For ten days they
toiled like hnyhands.
E. Ulrlch and W. Dlnkens of
Prospect came down for the
Yulctide, and reported winter
has hit them with a full wood
shed, and every pantry shelf
iuii oi jolly, etc.
The rumor situation has Im
proved until not more than 800
or 900 are in circulation dally.
The C. Wig Ashpole cat, who
has no tail and is part bob-rat,
gnawed turkey gizzards and
ruined a silk stocking Christmas
day.
The war threatens a shortage
of golf balls, as well as auto
tires. Qolfers may have to walk
out to the links, and then play
marbles.
The British prime minister
addressed the House and Sen
ate Fri. and when he eot
through there wasn't a congres
sional district in the country,
ne couitin t have carried next
May.
Miko DeVore, the tireless
juvenile tornado, got a tractor
from S. Claus, and so far has
not played his Grandpaw's barn
was a Japanese fort.
...
The college crowd of both
genders are back from the
campi.
The G. Cleveland Coram twin
boys are now doing their first
walking, and like everybody
else don't know where they are
going.
LONO TIME, NO TELL
London, Dec. 27. (At Brit
In disclosed today that she has
been at war with Bulgaria since
Dec. 13.
'We Shall Never Cease!
The Japanese lack even the decency of the Ger
mans. At least when the Germans invaded France,
and Paris was declared by the French command an
open city, the Germans spared the French metropolis
from destruction.
But not the Japanese !
General MacArthur officially declared Manila an
open city, so the ancient municipality and its defense
less inhabitants might be spared. But, instead of
observing the rules of war this wa3 the signal FOR
one of the most inhuman and merciless attacks from
the air, in the history of modern times.
The more certain it became that Manila had no
anti-aircraft guns, no artillery posts, nothing what
ever with which to defend itself the more murderous
and relentless became the assault
If any evidence were needed, to make it clear,
that (that as has been frequently stated in this col
umn), the war which started three weeks ago is a
WAR TO THE DEATH, this indescrible horror in
the Philippines yesterday supplies it.
Yes, in all seriousness, that is what it is. As Win
ston Churchill so truly and eloquently stated before
the American congress Friday :
'They will stop at nothing, that violence or treachery
can suggest we both of us, have much to learn in the cruel
art of war. But, what kind of a people do they think we
are? Is it possible they do not realize that we shall never
cease to persevere against them until they have been taught
a lesson, which they, and the world, will never forget."
And in this tragic hour, what better course could
any true American advise, than to follow the great
British statesman and leader, in the following closing
appeal:
"Members of the Senate and members of the House of
Representatives: I'll turn for one moment from the tur
moil and convulsions of the present to the broader spaces
of the future. Here we are together facing a group of
mighty foes who seek our ruin. Here we are together de
fending all that to free men are dear. Do we not owe it
to ourselves to our children and to tormented mankind to
make sure that these catastrophes do not engulf us again?
If you will allow me to use other language, I will say that
he must have a blind soul indeed, who can not see that
some great purpose and design is being worked out here be
low, for which we have the honor to be the faithful servant.
It is not given to us to peer into the mysteries of the future;
yet in the days to come, the British and the American
people, for their own safety and for the good of all, walk
top ether in majesty, in justice and in peacel"
Attention College Boys
In view of the fact Roger Henselman, son of Mrs.
George Henselman of this city was the first young
man in southern Oregon to secure a national scholar
ship at Harvard university, the editorial printed be
low by Editor Win. Allen White of the Emporia
Gazette, should be of interest to the people, of this
community and particularly the young men of col
lege age.
Incidentaly young Henselman was recently elected
to Phi Beta Kappa at Cambridge, the highest scholar
ship honor available in undergraduate circles, and has
made a distinguished record not only academically,
but in extra curricular activities, being on the edi
torial board of the college
son, a member of the famous glee club and dramatic
clubs, and prominent in many other popular college
activities.
Mr. White's editorial follows:
One of the most Important educational experiments
Initiated at Harvard under the administration of President
Conant has been the national scholarship plan, now operat
ing in Kansas and 17 other states, chiefly in the midwest.
This program is designed to make It possible for young men
of promise to obtain a college education who might not
otherwise be able to do so.
These scholarships, with maximum stipends of $1,000
In the freshman year and $1,200 each year thereafter, pay,
if necessary, a student's entire college expenses and in
some cases carry students through seven or eight years of
college and graduate study. Since their origin in 1934,
they have assisted 200 boys.
The awards differ from the usual Harvard scholarships,
most of which have fixed stipends of $400 or $500. With
national scholarships, the stipend is adjusted according to
the need of each recipient, and the awards are regarded as
prizes to be competed for by all high school students re
gardless of their financial circumstances.
A RECENT Harvard report shows the success of the plan
in assisting students from the lower income brackets
and from remote rural districts to obtain a college educa
tion, and also reveals the outstanding record of the scholar
ship holders In both academic work and extra-curricular
activities.
Fifty per cent of the scholars so far have come from
families with Incomes of under $2,500, and 80 per cent
from families with Incomes of less than $5,000. Fifty per
cent have come from communities of under 50.000 popula
tion and 15 per cent from communities of less than 5.000.
The national scholarship stipends are not merely
enough to allow a boy to go to college, but are large enough
to permit him to do the best scholastic work he is capable
of doing without putting himself under the strain of carry
ing outside jobs during the college year. Harvard officials
believe tnat the work of the college course has become so
demanding that If a boy has to earn a considerable part of
his expenses bv term-time work, he can do so only at the
sacrifice of the' degree and quality of attention he gives to
his studies or of his own growth as a well-rounded per
sonality. THERE is no pattern to which all national scholars con
form. Primarily, Harvard is seeking to train young
men who have the qualities that will fit them for civic and
professional leadership. The college is prepared to recog
nize native ability whatever the personal variation and
whatever the family circumstances or place of residence.
The Idea of the plan has been well stated In the words
of Thomas Jefferson, "We hopo to avail the state of those
talents which nature has sown as liberally among the poor
as the rich, but which perish without use If not sought for
and cultivated."
MANILA DEFENSE
New Bedford, Mass., Dec. 27.
W) In a telegram to Presi
dent Roosevelt, Basil Brewer,
publisher of the New Bedford
Standard Times, Mercury, to
day criticired the removing of
American defenses from Man
ila. The message, copies of which
ff
daily, the Harvard Crim
were sent to Secretaries Knox
and Stlmson, read:
"The stupidity of removing
defenses from Manila and de
claring it an open city with the
expectation that Japan would
respect its civil population finds
its expected answer in the death
and destruction wrought there
today.
"Such profound lack of real
ism after Pearl harbor raises
questions in the people's mind
as to whether army and navy
heads are capable of promptly
learning the ominous and ob
vious lessons Pearl harbor
taught."
Personal Health Service
Br William
Signed letters pertaining to peraonal health and hygiene, not ta dlteaae
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped seir
adrtressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be hrtrf and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instruction.
Address Dr. William Brady. Z65 El tarn l no. Beverly Hills, Calif.
NICOTINIC
Numerous Inquiries recently
received indicate that there is
a popular notion that nicotinic
acid is a mod
ification of or
has some rela
tion to nico
tine. Nicotinic acid
has no connec
tion with and
no resemb
lance to nico
tine. That the
name "nicotin
ic acid" sug
gests nicotine
to the unini
ated Is not surprising; In the
index of 22nd edition (1937) of
U. S. Dispensatory both nico
tine and nicotinic acid are men
tioned as on page 1621. but page
1621 deals with nicotine and
does not even mention nicotinic
acid, an understandable confus
ion in the mind of the Girl Fri
day who compiled the index.
Nicotinic acid is one of the en
tities or components of the nat
ural vitamin B complex. Chem
ically it is bcta-pyradine-car-boxylic
acid. It would be equal
ly misleading to infer that nico
tine acid acts as an acid in the
stomach or In the blood or tis
sues. Everybody needs a certain
amount of nicotinic acid every
day to maintain good functional
health. When the daily intake
of nicotinic acid is insufficient,
there is danger of developing
pellagra.
Just how much nicotinic acid
a child or adult must have daily
to prevent manifestation of pel
lagra or to maintain vigorous
health has not as yet been de
termined, but the average daily
requirement Is estimated to be
not less than 10 milligrams. An
average medicinal dose, for the
treatment of conditions due to
insufficient nicotinic acid in
take, is 50 to 100 milligrams
daily. Sometimes 300 to 500 mil
ligrams may be given at a single
dose. (A milligram is approxi
mately one-sixtieth of a grain).
Besides outspoken pellagra
from prolonged deprivation of
or extreme deficiency in the in
take of nicotinic acid, some
other conditions due to nico
tinic acid deficiency and pre
ventable and curable by in
creased Intake of nicotinic acid
are blacktongue in dogs, sore
tongue and canker sores in the
mouth, poor appetite, diarrhea.
In The
Day's
News
By Frank Jenkins
AMERICANS, waiting feverish-
" 1 v for nvprv aernn of news
from their countrymen who arc
holding on against heavy odds in
the Philippines until reinforce
ments can arrive, listen to ins
ton Churchill, speaking in the
senate of the United States, be
fore the assembled congress.
They listen with confidence,
for In the more than two years
his country has been at war,
Churchill has never failed to
give the picture exactly as it is.
WE were caught, he tells us, un
prepared. As a result, these early days of
war are dark. He offers the pre
diction that there "may be much
ground that will be lost that will
be difficult to regain. (Manila
perhaps; even Singapore.)
He adds:
"Our (Britain's and America's)
resources of materials and man
power are greater than theirs,
but we both have much to learn
of the cruel art of war."
He says:
"We are fighting wicked men
who had gathered great stores of
weapons to carry out plans
which had bevn long contrived
and matured."
CO much for the present. Of the
future, he says:
"U. S. British production,
within a year or 18 months, will
result in war power output be
yond anything ever seen In the
axis states."
That is to say (in particular)
air power, which since the begin
ning of the war has been on the
side of the axis, will shift with
12 to 18 months overwhelmingly
to OUR SIDE.
By then we will have hit our
stride.
CPEAKING of the Germans, the
Japs and the Italians, he asks:
"What kind of people do they
think we are? Do they not real
Ire we shall never erase to per
severe against them until we
have taught them a Irwm whtch
they and the world will never
forget?"
m
Brady. M. D.
ACID
mental dulness, and some cases
of migrainous h e a d a c h e a
single 100 milligram dose of
nicotinic acid by mouth has ab
orted the migraine attack, with
no ill after-effects. Nicotinic acid
has proved remarkably benefic
ial in the treatment of many
cases of skin trouble which pur
ports to be chronic eczema and
is apparently the typical or a
typical skin lesion of pellagra.
Progressive physicians are
now recognizing the frequency
of partial or moderate deficiency
disease in the general popula
tion, notwithstanding some half
baked utterances of shrewd
publicity-hunters who sought to
curb the "vitamin craze" recent
ly by citing ancient hospital
records, which, of course, would
give no reliable evidence on the
question. Unless or until meth
ods of precise testing of the pa
tient's supply and requirement
of the different vitamins are de
veloped, the use of vitamins to
prevent or cure common ail
ments must remain a matter for
the judgment of the physician
or for the experimentation of
the layman again I say with
out fear of contradiction that
there is no danger of anyone
getting too much of any vita
min he or she pleases to take.
QU ESTIONS ANSWERS
Care of Hair
In summer mj hair U soft and
ally enough to look nice. In winter
tt -becomes dry and stringy-looking
and the slight natural wave or curl
disappears. (M. C. W.)
Answer Hair and skin feet blight
ing effect of excessive aridity of arti
ficially heated air thru the winter.
If no bullt-ln alr-condltloning, use
simple tank wick humidifiers to In
sure evaporation of not less than
gallon of water dally In every room.
Send stamped envelope bearing your
address, for monograph "Care of the
Hair."
Tbc
Is there any place other than a
private M. D. where T. B. tests may
be had? (D. E.)
Answer You probably mean tbc.
test test for tuberculosis, not T. B.
test, which means test for tubercle
bacilli. In most cities there Is an
office repraaentlng the National Tu
berculosis Association. If you can't
find It In telephone directory write
to National Tuberculosis Association.
1790 Broadway, N. Y. City, for the
address.
(Copyright 1941. John F. Dllle Co.)
Fl. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Urady
should send letter dlrert to Dr.
tVllllam nraily. M. 0 IBS El
Cantlno. Beverly Hills, Calif.
He is right. We SHALL.
Along with the British, we are
slow starters. But, once well
started, we make our weight felt.
We always have, and we still
shall.
BEACE- LOVING democracies
are necessarily slow to start,
for it is not in their nature to
maintain vast armies and build
up vast war supplies in time of
peace.
But, as Oliver Cromwell said,
when they fight "they know
what they are fighting for and
LOVE what they know."
OHURCHILL says:
"I am pleased with the depth
and breadth of American under
standing of what is involved in
this war." He means that we
understand it is a WORLD war,
with our Pacific front only one
of many fronts.
On our own front, caught un
prepared and outnumbered by a
fully prepared enemy, we are
losing ground. Slowly and stub
bornly, and selling every foot of
it dearly, but until reinforce
ments arrive, we shall probably
continue to lose ground.
From the other fronts, the
news Is good. The Russians con
tinuc to push forward. The Brit
ish continue to chase the weak
ened Germans and Italians in
Africa, meanwhile preventing
their reinforcement from across
the Mediterranean.
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
(Continued Prom Page One)
the country therefore was that
Mr. Roosevelt's "full faith that
no group will take undue ad
vantage while we are faced by
c mmon enemies", is justified.
rpiIE administration has not
been able to restrain an off-the-record
chuckle at the ex
pense of the business represen
tatives. They were not smart,
'tis said. They roped themselves
in this way:
Labor wrote out the three
points (finally adopted) as its
original plan. The employers ac
cepted these three and added
their fourth freezing the closed
shop. Both plans were laid be-
fore F D R. on separate sheets
of paper at a moment when he
was hurrying to meet Church
ill in five minutes. Mr. Roose
velt noted that the first three
points were identical, and drew
a large oval penciled line
around the fourth point demand
ed by business.
The way the matter was pre
sented, furnished an obvious de
cision for a hurried, busy man.
He simply scratched out the
fourth point upon which agree
ment was lacking. If the issue
had been presented in different
form, there might have been a
different decision.
AAOST sensational and least
mentioned development of
the peace meeting was the way
"Mother" Bill Green and "Un
cle" John Lewis got around to
speaking to each other, and
working together. At the first
meeting they bowed stiffly, sat
as far apart as possib'.. Soon
they felt the necessity i speak
ing formally across the table
and in the end they got around
the game luncheon table at the
federal reserve board restaur
ant. It was not pre-arranged.
Two other boardmen were seat
ed for luncheon when Lewis
and CIO's Phil Murray came up
from one table and Green from
another and his George Meany.
They ate their food, and not
each other, as you might expect.
Those who followed the inner
developments are convinced the
personal relationship of these
two has been healed. Their joint
interest in the closed shop
brought them together. AFL and
CIO voted as a unit throughout.
They also seem to have agreed
to drop their organizational
strife for the duration. Competi
tion for membership will con
tinue but be restricted to peace
ful means.
Labor seems unified, tempor
arily at least.
Kelly's
Comment
From Washington
Jap Plans for
Invasion Known
Magnesium Plant
Output Hits Snag
Gas Mask Money
May Be Voted
By John W. Kelly
Washlngton, D. C, Dec. 27
Since the late Gen Homer Lea,
American commander of the Chi
nese army, revealed the strategy
of the Japanese war lords for
an invasion of the Pacific coast
by way of Willapa. Grays Har
bor and Cannon Beach, and af
ter pressing to Centialia and
Chehalis make swift assaults up
on Seattle and Portland, the Pa
cific northwest has become more
than ever a vital point In the
plan. Aside from shipyards and
airplane factories, the gigantic
power plants at Grand Coulee
and Bonneville are Inviting mili
tary objectives, to be bombed
and their generators destroyed
or seized by the Japanese.
First encounter the enemy
would experience, other than at
tacks by interceptors and bomb
ers, when they came wading
ashore near Aberdeen or on the
Oregon coast, would be the
troops maintained at Fort Lewis
and sent to the beaches by trucks
over hard-surfaced highways.
Overhead would whine the mot
ors of planes from Everett, He
Chord field. Sand Point, Port
land, ,Pendleton, Spokane. There
might be even some ixciored
tanks available for the de
fenders. What is recognized In the na
tional capital is that the Pacific
northwest, long more or less
neglected, has become a prize
well worth protecting and which
both war and navy departments
are preparing to defend with
everything they have.
Without fanfare, the machin
ery has started which will
strengthen the defenses. Addi
tional troops will be moved in
and as rapidly as possible they
will be completely equipped.
Since Pearl Harbor there has
been a diminution of war ma
terials sent to Britain. Planes
painted with the RAF Insignia
and ready for dispatch have been
held, repainted with the Ameri
can insignia, some alterations
made and these have been
winging over the Pacific to
Honolulu as replacements for
the bombers destroyed by the
sneak attack of the Japanese.
Tank production is rapidly in
creasing and a substantial por
tion is being retained for the
army. Machine guns and anti
aircraft guns are coming along
slowly for the time being.
Troops in the northwest will be
liberally supplied in the next
few months.
PRODUCTION of magnesium
has been threatened with cur
tailment by the arrest of Dr.
Fritz Hansgrig. for whose pro
cess Henry J. Kaiser and associ
ates borrowed millions of dollars
from RFC (the fee of Thomas G.
Corcoran, Tommy the Cork in
the good old days at the White 1
House, was $65,000 in this in-j
stance) to build the plant at Per- j
manente. There is talk of Per-
manente plant being shut down
unless the Inventor Is permitted
to continue in charge.
Senator Mon C. Wallgren of
Everett, Wash., presented docu
ments last spring showing that
not to exceed 4.000 tons would
be produced in the United States
without the consent of the Ger
man firm owning the process.
It was this statement by the
Washington senator that led the
government to map an enorm
ous production and to under
take other processes than the
German patent. Among these
other methods was the Hansgrig
system, a highly explosive pro
cess and which has caused three
fires already at Permanente.
One of the new magnesium
plants was to be at Spokane,
where 35,000 kilowatts from
Grand Coulee would be used,
but for some reason this project
appears to have been dropped.
There are 10 million tons of
high grade magnesite near Spo
kane and 25,000,000 tons of low
grade. The proposed Spokane
plant was to have a capacity of
24.000,000 pounds a year and it
is estimated that at that rate of
production the raw ore would
not be exhausted before 2550
A. D.
William S. Knudsen of OPM
says he is aware of the deposits
and of the process evolved at
Pullman college, which produces
in a small pilot plant 100 pounds
daily, but he is not inclined to
favor a large scale commercial
plant until later. The Perman
ente plant was, also, an experi
ment. Henry Kaiser recently
obtained another $12,000,000
loan from RFC to be used for
production of magnesium; gave
no details as to where the money
would be spent.
COST of a gas mask is $3.75.
Fiorella LaGuardia is asking
congress to order five million
masks as a starter, with 45,000,
000 more to come later. The
first masks are to be distributed,
according to LaGuardia, to civi
lians on the Pacific coast. Pro
duction would have started, but
the money was not forthcoming.
The affair at Pearl Harbor has
caused renewed Interest and
there is a probability of the
money being voted. The cost
will be absorbed by the govern
ment to insure that everyone has
one of the contraptions. Once
issued, people must always have
the mask within reach. After
the Pacific coast is supplied,
other sections to be protected
will be the Atlantic and gulf
coasts.
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Vut POPEYE Cartoon
Shows Today "Flies Ain't Human" I
1:45 3:30 -8:45 8:00 ,nd News Events
ROXY
Flight o Time
Medford ana Jscksoa County
History from the files of the Mall
Tribune 10 and to years ago-
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
December 28, 1931
(It was Monday)
Snow now four to six feet
deep and badly drifted in Sis-
kiyous and traffic south is
halted.
Japanese forces drive south
ward toward Kowpantze.
Rain with a high of 36 and
a low of 31 degrees; snow and
rain over state.
Turkey supply in state clean
ed up as holidays wane.
Rain in the valley and snows
In the hills assure orchardists
and farmers of moistun next
summer, Kiwanis told.
Annual public hearing on
county budget will be held next
Thursday with Ben Harder as
chairman. Controversy raging
around head of county engineer
by citizens who protest his
roadmaking.
Bankers predict accord will
come to Europe on war debt
and reparations.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 28, 1921
(It was Wednesday)
Receivership for Ku KIux
Klan is demanded by deposed
Grand Goblins.
Ratification of Irish peace
terms with England now cer
tain. Former Oregon preacher ar
rested in California for $29,000
robbery.
California dry agents poison
ed by moonshine they drank in
course of duty.
More rain predicted; high 51,
low 32.
Diamond drill arrives and
will be used in Sams valley oil
well.
C. M. Thomas announces he
will run for circuit judge.
Gov. Oicott vetoes "fool
bills" passed by special session
of legislature.
Attorney General Daugherty
announces living costs will be
reduced by price publicity.
VICTORY VIA BONNEVILLE
McMinnville, Dec. 27. WV
The United States electrical
power developments will bring
victory in the war, Bonneville
Administrator Paul J. Raver
told the Rotary club yesterday.
. MXCi
m sssss . SI Bm - a -
in the Best of
the Hardy Hits!
TODAY -3 DAYS
U A
HfMNOS:
tNwii i Opvn
at S:45
tSe-lle Ine. tai
t4 tm