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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1942)
PAGE FOUR MDroiU3TRIBUNI Bvryoa la ftoalhcra O KMdi tb UaU Tribe." Dally Ktfv tatarday pubiuhvd by MSDVORD PRINTINO CO. 17-tl North Kir 8U PhoM t!41 HOflERT W. RUHU -Editor. CRN BUT R. OIUJTRAP. Uftoa(r. Ester Meond clftM mttr at M4 ford, Oragoa, n(lr Act o Mareh I. UTI SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mall la AvBnea: Dally and Sunday na faar MM lUlly and Siiitday all month..... I Iail and Sunrtar 1 monihi... I" raily and Sunday thraa tnontha I W Dally and Sunday ona month... Tl y Crrtar la Adwaaca Mdford. Aah land. Cantral Point. Jackaonvllla. Onld Hill. Rogue Rl var, Pboanla. TalanL, nd oa motor routaa: Dally and Sunday ona yaar It Dally and Sunday ona month... .T All tirmi eaah la advaoca. Offirlal Pap.r af tha City af Mrdfor Official Papar af Jackaoa Coaaty HRMHKR Or TUB ASWMIATFiD PRRM RarMvlns Foil Wlra rlra Tha Aaaociatad Hraaa la aialuaivaly n lit lad la tha uaa for pubJIcatloa of all di dlapatrhaa crad'tad to It of otnar wla eradltad to thla papar. and aloe to th local no public-had horaln. All rlrhto for publication of MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adert1a1n BapraaantatJa WEBT-HOIXIDAT COMPANY. INC Officaa l Naw York, Chicago. trait. Pn Franrtaco. (xa Angalaa. Saattlo. Portlaod. t. Laala. Atlanta. Vanoouor. Pmusitl4stciTm Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry ava... uArvthlnfl fa now hao- pening to Herr Hitler'i world conquering dream, but surren der and severe ease of bolls. The First Lady advocates a plan to put women In tha fields to harvest crops. Thus next sum mer farmers will" be advised by the Maud Muller Bridge club. Instead of along Front St., If they want their hay pitched to bring It In Friday. Conquered lands of Europe, duly assembled, solemnly pledge to punish Nazi chiefs and Quis lings, in the great reckoning. In the other World war, the favor ite outdoor and indoor sport was hanging the Kaiser. After 20 years of calm and exiled wood cutting In Holland, he shuffled off hit mortal coll, at a ripe old age In bed. LINCOLN DAY HINT (Bowling, O., Tribune) "I have nothing against the present Incumbents as this Is not a partisan affair as we 11 belong to the party to which the Immoral Lincoln was a member." When peace comes. It's going to take longer to demobilize all the committees than the Army. Placing of farm prices on a parity with industrial wages Is held a move towards Inflation. What the farmers need Is a John L. Somebody, as their leader, e Mrs. J. Cochran Robin report ed to police a boy with an air gun took a shot at her and missed. "His conduct Is awful" chirped Mrs. Robin angrily. ' Only last week, when It was cold, he put out a hunk of suet for me and the ball. and chain." There never was a time In all history, when the If'i were so big, and the When'i so plenti ful. IT SO APPEARS (New York Times) "Did the Japanese know how things were going In Rus sia when they drcided to enter the war? Did Der Fuehrer wire Tokyo "Come right in; the snow Is fine'?" Mr. W. Wlllkle. the late GOP presidential candidate, is now talking as he did in 1940 when hp was nn eminent target for eggs and wastebaskets. One school of thought holds he was right the first time. Iceland Is "dry," and has one percent beer for whistle wet ting. This has resulted In some terrific concoctions, press re ports say, viz.: Spiking the beer with melted shoe polish. This puts to shame anything Ameri cans sipped during Prohibition, and they were not "choosey." Icelanders, to date, have not tried to make "home-brew," and then brag about Its good- Wanted: Boy to deliver eggs 14 years old. (El Paso Times) Where to? e e a Any motorist with a new set of tires is going some, all re ports Indicate. Around here he sure Is the show-off! Dallas, Tex., Jan. 14. JF) Deputy U. S. Marshal Ted Hln ton went out In search of a selective service registrant, long overdue at draft headquarters. The lad wasn't at work. He wa.n't home. Klnfolks didn't know where he was either. Hinton found him today in the army. lie signed up last week. Their One Great Danger With the situation what it is in the Far East and it's bad, we don't begrudge what encouragement can be legitimately gleaned from the war reports, as far as our U. S. forces are concerned. At the same time this column's allergy against wishful thinking is steadily increasing as time goes on, for we are convinced it represents this country's greatest single danger. TXTE have the men. We have the guns and planes (or soon will have them). But above all we have the natural resources, ability and stamina required to crush the Axis powers. But the ever lurking and sinister danger, is that as time goes on, and conditions from the allied angle continue to improve (as they probably will), "we the people" will get the idea, that the victory is in the bag anyway, and the time therefore has come to resume business as usual, win the war in our stride on one hand, and make some easy money and whoopee on the other. VES that, as we see it, is the ONE great danger, a return to that complacency and over-confidence which characterized not only our rank and file but the directive heads of our army and navy (particu larly the latter), before the sneak attack by Japan, and has already been accountable for the needless waste of thousands of American lives. Let us not make the same mistake a SECOND time. Far better to err on the side of OVERestimating the strength of the enemy, than UNDERestimating it a a a A ND without yielding in the slightest to undue " pessimism we are convinced this is true : If the war is to be won, the UNITED STATES MUST WIN IT! And for the United States to win it, will TAKE EVERYTHING WE HAVE GOT, not only today, but tomorrow and the day after. Just so far as we con tinue to indulge in wishful thinking, refuse to face the facts because they are unpleasant, and thus lull ourselves into a sense of false security; just so much longer will the war last, and the cost of final victory in blood and treasure increase. . CO let us follow the example of Britain under Churchill, throw any spirit of defeatism out of the window, on ONE hand ; throw any spirit of com placency or muddling through on the OTHER. When the facts are bad, let's grant they are bad. When they are good, let's proclaim their goodness, but not exaggerate the same. In short let us be realistic and tough in this war; for only by being REALISTIC and tough can the war be won 1 Why "Kid" Ourselves? The Mail Tribune feels particularly concerned with this wishful-thinking problem, for in spite of our fre quent warnings in that direction it looks as though we ourselves recently fell a victim to it Last Sunday, for example, we commented upon the fact that conditions must be genuinely critical in Germany, and Hitler might even be nearer the end of his rope, than anyone heretofore imagined, be cause Dr. Dietrich, Hitler's own press representative had broadcast the following warning: "Germany1! military operations on the Eastern front have now entered an extremely serious and Indeed critical phase." We refused to swallow the tempting lure entirely, bait, hook and sinker, for we DID call attention to the fact the report came from Hitler's own mouth piece and from the standpoint of truth, therefore, was a discredited one, but Our net conclusion however was, conditions from a military standpoint really HAD become pretty critical on the Russian front, or Hitler's propaganda chief would not make such a damaging admission. He must have felt the German people shock, perhaps a major catastrophe, by thus grant-; ing the phase reached had become EXTRhMLLY j eral nundred mue,. The war Critical. department feels the sama way I about California.. Nothing has OUT now comes Henry J. Taylor, representing the .hiM North American Newspaper Alliance, fresh from this attitude of the war depart Berlin" after an airplane tour of seven European ment. First revelation of the capitals, who dismisses this Dietrich statement, as a ,h00!f'5ubishinge 7" new 'indul most obvious and transparent bit of official Nazi tries on the coast came witn the propaganda he has seen, SOLELY designed to mis- determination to move the pro- ' 1 . .. . . ... nmrd mil ne mill for aluminum represent tne Situation in Europe and impair tne from Troutdale to anywhere i he Rocky mountains remains to allied effort by Creating the belief, that Der Richs- outside Oregon, but preferably j be seen. One important draw-fiiPhi-pr IS nn hU lnt om nnrl nnthinc mnrVi npprl 'he Spokane area, and set.dlng I back to establishing new Indus- tuemer ks on n is last legs, ana noimng mucn neea lm)r tabrlc,tlon plllnt pr0. tries in the hinterland is lack of ue uune uui give nun nine Windbag Will knock OUt lllMbLLf I or Arizona. Taylor is an experienced journalist and a sophisti- ggJ&S cated one. In view of the fact, he was m Berlin less The Dalies and including Pen than a month ago, there can be no reasonable doubt dieton, La Grande, Baker, waiia of the essential truth of his statement i tXX& filing J mill: sent messages to senators niTRSTA IS rlmncr n kwpII inh nn the pnatprn front, and reDresentatlves. long dls- but conditions aren't either there Or Within dermany, and U the allies Varn if they had a chance. i'on to do Its share In the war accept any SUch assumption, they are in line for a Naturally. Senators McNary andort. Time hss been lost In ,, , 1 . ' ,i' ' Holman began fighting to hold , locating and starting the govorn- mde awakening, and a COStly one. ,,h, ,n(lu,try ln Oregon: Cailfor- ment aluminum plants, in build- So, With SOIlie embarrassment We emphasize nla's Hiram Johnson and Sher- 'ing towers for transmission lines the insidious danger of wishful thinking, by present- m.n Downey nuim to save the nd it win m.mn'h b' , ... e , . .. ... j Los Angeles plant. Washington s these government plants will be ing this evidence, demonstrating this department IS Bone ,nd wallgren assumed a making aluminum Ingots. To re no t entirely immune tO it. hands-off policy, f-r thev would j et them as the war depart- ! not object to the Troutdale plant j ment Intimated it might do. HERDER EXEMPTION Yakima. Jan. 14. (AP) A flexible price fixing plan and de ferment of sheepherders from military service was asked by Washinaton Wool Growers' as- sociation members who reelected MEDFORD MAIL had to be prepared for a uuu rnuuu iuye, auu me near the breaking point President Tom Pn.mheller of Walla Wall, here yesterday. AYRSHIRE HEAD Astoria. Jan. 14 (AF- Omar Fslk. Ha'sev. was elected preni- dent of the Oreiion Ayrshire as ' soclation yesterday. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, Personal Health Service Br Willism lined letters pertaining t personal health sod hygiene, not to dlaease dlagnoatw or treatment, will ha answered by Dr. Brady if a tumped tit d1 teased envelope Is enclosed. Letters shoaJd he brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large n amber of lettere received only a few can ha answered here. No reply can he made to queries not conforming to 1m t ructions, address Dr. William Brady, X6a El Cam I no. Beverly Hills, Calif. DIET AND The state of the teeth la pri marily determined by diet. It will do no harm, even if it makes no im pression on his mind, if the de n 1 1 s t who questions this assertion would refer t o "Nutrition and Physical D egeneration" by Westor A. Price, D. D. S. (published by Hoeber of Dr. Brady Harper Bros., 1940), before he write scath ing rebuke to the editor about the way the ignoramous con ducting this column misleads the youth of the land. The relation of the diet to morale may not be as obvious as is the relation between diet and the state of the teeth. Prob ably the majority of recognized nutrition authorities . today would agree that diet directly affects morale but many of them would be disposed to con sider further the question of the influence of diet on the state of the teeth. For one Instance of the effect of diet on morale there is the recent request of government authorities that the millers and bakers throughout the country begin Immediate using enrich ed flour and enriched bread in place of ordinary white flour and white bread, as a means of Improving nutrition in the Interest of National Defense. Enriched flour is ordinary white flour to which has been added (or restored) certain amounts of the several vitamins and minerals (amounts specified by Committee on Food and Nu trition, National Research Coun cil) which are removed and dis carded in the modern wheat milling process. Enriched flour and enriched bread made with such flour is vast improve ment upon ordinary white flour, although it does not entirely take the place of real whole wheat flour such as everybody In America used exclusively prior to the Introduction of roller milling and bolting, about seventy-five to a hundred years ago. For a while I opposed the agi tation or movement for the general use of enriched flour In place of ordinary white flour, because It seemed an Inade quate compromise with the evil, and also because universal dis Kelly's Comment From Washington. D. C War Department Would Move Plants Inland Sent. Holman, McNary Fight for Retention Br John W. Kellr Washington, D C, Jan. 14. If the war department had its InHuntrv in the north- 1 west with a war order (no lled n;,i?n1Bl1 d"'ense posed for Los Angeles to Utah ' :1c'il,H,ir Slrtc helr state. i "tTt; "T J" the prospect of the Los Angeles plant going to Phoenix: th Utah senators expecting the Ln An geles project being located in Salt Lake City: Wyoming and i Colorado senators suddenly real-i OREGON, WEDNESDAY, Brady. M. D. MORALE tribution, keeping and use of genuine whole wheat flour is out of the question. It will not keep well enough. Next best thing is universal use of en riched flour in place of ordin ary white flour. Enriched flour looks and tastes practically the same as ordinary white flour, costs the consumer no more, and keeps as well as ordinary white flour. It has all the cook ing qualities or baking qualities of ordinary white flour. Finally, in actual experiments on ani mals enriched flour has been found to approach the nutritive values of whole wheat flour even more nearly than was sup posed. For better nutrition, better health and better morale every body should get simply enrich ed flour or bread. No miller or baker or "health" food vendor knows better what is best for national nutrition than the rec ognized authorities in the Com mittee on Food and Nutrition of the National Research Coun cil. qiESTIONS AND ANSWERS . Garlic Is garlic good to build up low blood pressure? I have a juicer and have been taking carrot juice and garlic Juice first thing when I get up. and aeem to have more pep. Was told by doctor I have low blood pressure. (C. S. B.) Answer Bo Jar aa t know It has no particular effort on low, high or medium blood pressure, but if taking carrot Juice and garlic Juice makea you feel better they are both good healthful foods. Pemphigus Member of family. 85. Informed by physician he baa pemphigus. Does thla disease always terminate fat ally? Would expert nursing care in creaae the patient's chances? (P. E.) Answer Pemphigus la a skin dis ease of unknown cause, character ised by constant formaUon of blebs. Skilled nursing care will greatly In crease comfort and give the patient a better chanoe to recover. Intra venous injections of iron and sub cutaneous injections of coagulln have given excellent results In some cases. Heat Treating Husband la a heat treater work ing constantly with "cyanegg." which la a deadly poison. Many men warn It will kill him. The ' label states cyanegg contains 90 percent sodium cyanide. (Mrs. D. R.) Answer Aa a matter of fact It seems to have no poisonous effect on workers so using It. (Copyright 1843, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. O, MS El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. I izlng their states were suff i ' ciently Inland to meet war de i partment policy, all indulged In : a scramble. The aluminum rolling mill was only the beginning. War de partment began talking of shift ing the government-owned al uminum plants being built at , Tacdma and on the Columbia river to the Snokane area. War department muttered something about insisting on much of the aircraft activity on Puget sound ; being sent Inland and giving , the same dose to aircraft makers i in California. War department does not assume responsibility for expansion of the aircraft in dustry on the coast, although it awarded contracts for hundreds of miltons of dollars to these concerns and authorized their enlargement; it acts as though these plants are guilty for re maining in Washington and Cal ifornia. Present program Is, apparent ly, to place new contracts in Oregon or Calitomia and only in the eastern part of Washing ton. Senators from Utah. Ari lona, Wyoming. Colorado and Idaho consider the idea a good one. How far the war depart ment will go in attempting to create new industr'al centers in the region between the Blue and ; aumciem eiectric power, ai though transmission lines could be extended from Grand Coulee and Bonneville Into Idaho at henvy cost. IN view of the production program announced by the pres ident for 1942, Involving 56 bil lion dollars and specifying 65, 000 planes, any disruption of i mvSi industries would ssible for that re- 1 the 85 000 ai?nln?. Z S '"0 os uuu airplanes the first re- : qulrement is aluminum for the j'ujilage and wings. Provided the war department carries out Its prctiam, about tha only wax orders the north JANUARY 14, 1942. west will be called upon to per form will be shipbuilding con tracts from the maritime com mission and some destroyers and other small shooting boats for the navy. WHILE the drive for old newspapers has developed Into an all-year affair, a more im portant drive will soon be Init iated by the government col lection of scrap Iron and steel. Oregon and Washington, which sold shiploads of scrap to the Japanese enabling them to build up stockpiles, will be invited to yield every pound of scrap with in their borders. Details have not been worked out, but the program specifies cash pay ments to owners. Undecided is whether the owner should carry the metal to a central point or park it in front of the house where wagons can pick it up. The salvaging Is to extend be yond scrap steel and iron; the government also proposes col lecting all waste copper it can get. There was a suggestion that old auto tires be gathered but rationing and retreading has caused these to disappear. An other shortage. Rope material Imported from the Philippines has been shut off. Housewives will have to use cotton rope, but that will not satisfy the navy nor the merchant ships. In The Day's News By Frank Jenkins JAPAN, striving desperately to get in the early punch that will win the fight before her bigger opponent can get going, spreads her attack to the Dutch East Indies islands of Celebes and Borneo using parachute troops to gain a foothold. There is OIL at Tarakan, where they strike in Borneo. The stubbornly fighting Dutch say the Tarakan wells are mined and will be dynamited if they have to be abandoned. OTILL attacking with heavily superior forces, the Japs take Kuala Lumpur, crude rub ber center 240 miles north of Singapore. The dispatches relate the rubber groves and accumu lated rubber supplies are being destroyed. The "scorched earth" policy worked against the Japs in China. It worked against the Germans in Russia. It is being applied to the South Seas. MAVY Secretary Knox, ad- ' dressing the U. S. Confer ence of Mayors assembled In Washington, answers the ques tion that is in every mind. He says: "The U. S. fleet Is not Idle, but no early, conclusive show down with the Japanese fleet can be expected." He tells the mayors that Ger many, bringing Japan into the war, sought to divert British and U. S. attention from the battle of the Atlantic, which is still the war's most important struggle. We were too smart, he says, to be caught in that trap. He adds: "It is HITLER we must de stroy. That done, the whole axis fabric will collapse." ABOUT the only news from Luzon as these words are written is that the Japs are still gathering their forces for the expected all-out attack on Mae Arthur and his little army. They want these heroic rear-guard fighters out of the way so they can concentrate on Singapore. INTERESTING news comes to day (Monday) from Chung king, where a member of a Quaker ambulance unit return ing from a round trip over the Burma road, says: "The road Is full of Chinese troops moving WESTWARD to ward the border with tanks, motorized artillery, Bren guns and light weapons. On both trips I met thousands upon thousands of Chinese troops, well-eoulnried. rrark fioht.r. ALL MOVING WEST." Your map will tell you that a military force moving WEST WARD from Burma would hava as its objective taking the Japs in tne flank and the rear, thus relieving the pressure on Singa pore. QN'LY a little while back (as . time moves In these days) we were saying commiserating ly: "The poor, helpless Chi nese!" Now we're tonkin orl n the Chinese to help us out of j ma noie we re in in xne south Seas. I AND only recently we were cursing the Russians heart- lily for putting in with Hitler. jNow It Is the Russians who are i running Hitlrr ragged. . We look longingly at Vladivostok and think how easy It would be for jUit hard-hitting Russians, now our buddies, to smack the Japs from there. World wars are full ot sur prises. I ONDON reports today that a eU "frvraien source whose infor- Kint fiermanr has almost Invariably proved accur ate" says Germany's army dis sensions have spread to the navy. According to thla source, Vice Aitmini TVicnitz. riazi submar ine chief, accuses Grand Ad miral Raeder of misleading mm about successes of the submar- i. rMr anil AVAILABILITY OF REPLACEMENTS. Doenitz flatly accuses his superior cm cer of "being responsible for the MISCARRIAGE of the sub marine wafare." IN Libya, the British find on a German captive an order calling for extreme economy in the use of gasoline. The order refers to the great expenditures of fuel on the eastern front and adds that the "fuel situation in the Reich is extremely string ent" IEEP your fingers crossed as to these recurring rumors of trouble of one sort and an other in Germany. There may be no truth in them. They may be German propaganda. Don't expect that Germany Is going to crack up tomorrow. But until the Germans quit retiring before the Russians, you may be pretty sure there is a screw loose somewhere. News Behind The News by Paul Mallon (Continued Prom Page One) ing ot some of the other gen erals looks more like prepara tion for a spring campaign in Russia than an evidence of in ternal army demoralization. Now, everyone here would be happy enough to believe the long awaited Nazi collapse is at hand, but none of the author ities is. impressed by the evi dence so far. They think rumors furnish very dangerous comfort for us. Actually some officials believe the Nazis themselves have put out some of the "collapse" stories indirectly ln order to weaken our morale and our war effort. The Nazi army is too closely tied ln with the Nazi party to lead anyone here to suppose it would seek a peace, even if Hit ler decided to step out. Obvious ly the first thing the united nations will do ln peace is to abolish the German army, and the army leaders well know this. The prevailing opinion here is that Hitler will have to be de feated on the field of battle. e 1VHEN the Japs moved into air " fields only 175 miles, from Singapore, hopes slipped sharp ly here. Up to then, the Jap anese were required to use navy carriers as bases for their pur suit ships accompanying their bombers. Naturally this restrict ed their air activity over the great British fortress. But now with land bases within pursuit ship range ot Singapore, they will be able to bring their best method ot attack into play, e e JLflOST harassed of all defense organizations is the simplifi cation division of OPM's bureau of Industrial conservation. It has been working three months and all It has been able to simplify is toothpicks (actually). Lawyers for business firms will not allow them to cooperate (to standardize paper bags, al low only a few kinds ot carbon and writing papers, etc.) for fear ot anti-trust laws. Assistant At torney General Thurman Arnold has written a letter promising immunity and Attorney General Biddle has approved it, but the business lawyers say the succes sors ot Biddle and Arnold might change the policy (they remem ber what happened ln the Madi son oil trials). They want legis lation, but Arnold and Biddle are afraid they will never get the anti-trust laws back on the statute books, if war time Im munity Is legislated. The simpli fication program has thus been sabotaged by red tape. OPM's ire is rising, however, and it is likely that you will shortly see the first order issued barring cans for beer and re quiring sale ln bottles only. Shapes and sizes of many more products will be simplified, once the program gets out of its legal maze. GOOD OLD MAILMAN Pocatello. Jan. 14 Phillip Rises. 18. stationed with U. S. forces in the Pacific, wrote his parents, complaining be cause ne naa received no let ters recently. Tearfully, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Riggs sat down and wrote to their son, reported missing by the war deoartment since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. December 7. Closint time lor Classified Ads ioo io ciaeeui 12 .SO p. m. Flight o' Time Medfortf and Jaekeon Cantity History from the riles of the Mall Tribune 10 and to years eta. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January 14. 1932 Ot was Thursday) Leaders of Democracy con demn Hoover and promise much In speeches at Victory dinners. County Jobless given permis sion to start panning gold, and operations start in Jacksonville. Reconstruction finance passed by .lower house ot congress. Experts complete plan for cure of depression. Public meeting to be held Saturday to discuss cut ln teach ers' salaries. Pomona Grange to meet at Applegate hall next week. Ladv bootlegger Is discharged. her husband jailed. Unsettled weather prevails with threat of snow. High 39, low 39 degrees. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January 14, 1922 Ot was Saturday) Oregon leads nation in college students, according to popula tion, census statistics show. British parliament ratifiea Irish peace pact. Will H. Hayes, postmaster general, announces his retire ment. Experts report revival ot mining underway here. Gas explosion breaks cable in Trigonia oil well and drilling stopped. Chamber of commerce votes to admit travelling men as mem bers. Rain again predicted. High 48, low 34 degrees. OF PRICE BILL DUE Washington, Jan. 14. (AP) President Roosevelt's indictment of the senate price control bill I as. the direct road to inflation was expected today to force congress to abandon at least one of its two special concessions to farm ers. Some of the II senators and house members who will draft the final form of the wartime measure said privately that they probably would recommend to the two chambers the elimina tion of a provision linking farm parity prices the yardstick for fixing farm ceilings directly to industrial wages. Departing from his usual cus tom of withholding comment on pending legislation, the president told a press conference yesterday tl at this provision, sponsored by Senator O'Mahoney 03 Wyo.) would start a spiral of rising prices costly to the farmers and everyone else in the nation. He said pointedly that such a formula would do more than are" thing else to saddle a huge debt on this and later generations and would encourage labor to de mand higher wages to meet in creased costs of living. FAR EAST RADIO T New York, Jan. 14. (Wide World) Cecil Brown, CBS war correspondent stationed at Sing apore, has continued off the air as his New York office seeks to bring him back. His last broad cast was January 8 after which British authorities there denied him further short wave facili ties. In a cable to his office Brown said the reason given to him was: "Your broadcasts are dam aging to the British cause and are inimical to local morale." Since the ban, CBS has been passing up Singapore in its Far East pickups, but meanwhile striving to iron out the situa tion. Before going to Singapore, Brown was stationed at Cairo and before that in the Balkans and at Rome, where last April he was barred from broadcast ing by the Italian government. C Mall Tribune ant ads. "Nq Child of Mino will s"i7onr.isr ivir Don't b to sura. Mother I Anrbwly. anTwhvre. nui h iuuii,lwm pnel fe 0l7 iralum mar be lrlns ltill rour ra.ld rt, ., ttartini trouDIa, Itlmn roar ern knowlns It. It your diikl w pa, andervsif tit, nervous, bas an nnwir rioms-h. picks at ticm or seat these us-r roundworms mtr bs at work. Plar salt I Cot J,rn.'i Vtrnlfart at rnee. ns'u "t smu. rt m-.ii ukbora it no worms aro thara. It arts )u m a mild laiatlT.. Jama's It Anairai j ""f" Peepeletar worm medicine, aaed -- ---v. a oi v. err sj 4aMlTlirT aVtjsBsFeBBj Jarae's VsnaUat si At all dma storea.