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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1942)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORDO-tJWTWBUXl "IimiM la Seathnra Oreeaa to tke Mall Triaeee." Deilr Bare Pualiahnd nr MBDPORD PRINT1NQ OO. It-tt Nana Fir it P tKI ROBERT W. RIIHU Belter. iniit a OILRTRAP. Maaaser. A Indapnailant Nee-apaper. Inllrrf moil alene matter at Mae ford. Orasae. ender Aol af Mama s. IS7S UBaCRIPTlOH BATSe Br Hall la Aa.eecei Dall, and SuniUr eae rear M Daily aad Sundar all ealhn... Sts rj.il, and Sundnr all mnnthn... I Dallr and Sundalf IKraa month, .M Dell and Sundar eae mania... TS B? Carriar la Ad.nnee Mad'orS. Art land. Cnntral Point Jiennnnvllle. Oold HIIL Rnsun Rlr. Paaaala. Tnlnnl ' and ae moior roaiaat Dall, and Sundar ana rear " z: pall, and Rundar ana month.. .TS All tarme ah la advance. Offlelel Papar a . , "'" Orllrlel Papar el jetkaea Caentr HKMBER OP TUB ARROCIATBD PRRRR Pex.lM rail l-eanra wire a." a The Annnoialed- Preen In eselual'elt ntltlnd in tha una for poblleatlen af all am dlnoslchnn nrndl'nd la or elhnr lee aradltad la Ihll papar. and alaa to thn local nnirs nunllnhed herein. All rlntn for ponMcallnn of npeelal dlipaunao Daroln ara alaa renewed. USURER OP UNITED PRBRR MEMBER OP AUDIT BUR RAO OP CIRCULATION Adrnrllalns RPr""'i.. WBST-HOI.UDAf COUPAMT. IIJC. Offtoan la No. Torn. Chic,, Dotro It. tan Pranelacn. Lot Aniolan. Seattle. Portland, it Lonla. Atlanta. Venneaanr. MtmU flUISim ST5 Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perrf Thn hrav defender! of Wake Island, captured by the Jap anese were paraded through the ttreeta of Shanghai, en route to an Internment camp, where they will be put to work, a Reutera dispatch from Vichy Informs. "The march will do the men good," it ia further claimed. Many a Nipponese Jibe and Jeer will be hurled at the heroes. No auch Indignity will be heaped upon the Japanese diplomats, so tenderly housed in a Virginia winter resort hotel. They are prisoners of war, and as such not entitled to special pam pering. e The threatened strike of city employees of Detroit haa been likened to a similar one In Boa ton, a score of years ago. The Boston uprising was squelched by a governor named Coolldge, who quibbled not. THE RETORT COURTEOUS (Pendleton East Oregonlan) "Do you know that the man who writes 'Do You Know' for the E. O. does not read his bible, and spells Isaiah, Islah?" Is the way commu nication reads that has been turned over to us. In reply, we wish to say that he does not read his Bible as often as he should, but that he has been taught enough respect for' the book to write it al ways with a capital B." (29 Yrs. Ago. Column) Bonneville Dam power keeps in the headlines, and the latest coup proposed ia to make it the center of pool of North west power companies. There are many people who wish Bonneville Dam, and its sister, Coulee Dam, were battleships and bombers. A Nazi radio playing Teutonic tunes interfered with the speech of an American diplomat, broad cast from the Pan America con ference. This should result in the mobilization of sopranoes to unleash their high notes, the next time Herr Hitler assails the microphone. . The report that Oregonians would be provided with gas masks, is now denied. The pub lic is thus spared the fun of scaring each other and putting on the little woman's hat in mistake for one. a INCONSPICUOUS MOTHERSI (Grants Pass Bulletin) "So here goes for another former Merlin. te, our good friend Clyde Sackett, who was honored with a fine boy Thurs d a y I Congratulations again. Then the publisher of the Bulletin, who is weekly honored by the Merlin Moan. Is the latest with a daughter on Monday. But it took our friend. Bill Creal. to really turn the trick, with twin boys, Saturday! J. Wesley Bates, the chin whacker recalls a man he shaved 39 years. The victim reports he doea too, and it seems like it was only day be fore yesterday. a John L. Lewis, the CIO. hot shot is charged with "trying to save his face" by offering labor peace terms. He however re fuges to come out In the open, and from behind his eyebrows. a "I wasn't born in a log cabin, but my folks moved into one as soon as they started living Indoors. (Coronet Mag.) Hum ble beginnings. Cm Mat! Tribune waai ads. 44.dlTIl Honolulu's Tragic Report History is often ironical. . When the history of World war No. 2 is written, it may be clear, that sneak-blow the Japanese thought would win their war, LOST it For it awoke that sleeping giant, alias the United States, from a coma of complacent over-confidence, which might otherwise have been disasterous. a ERTAINLY those of us who were not awakened by tti shock of the devastating blow at Honolulu on December 7th, must be the Roberts committee report, which was released yesterday. For that report reveals condition which existed in both naval and army circles in Honolulu, preceding the attack. And there is no reason to believe that there existed nowhere else, it must certainly have been more or less prevalent, not only throughout the country, but throughout our armed forces. THIS lethargy has often VSaV Vttls I.WViVltUi SSI V drive into Poland started. There was, thank God, in this country no similar pacifist or defeatist psychology; but -this committee report does strongly indicate that a complacent be lief did exist in the United would be avoided and if it mot Line of Uncle Sam s the same sense of indifference and false security extending even to our armed forces. At least that is the only way we can explain, the glaring instances of derelection of duty, not only in the Hawaiian command, but all along the line, down to second lieutenants and non-commissioned officers. THINK of it! A Japanese U-boat sighted and sunk, only 43 minutes before the attack, yet no additional alert orders whatever were given. About the same time a non-commissioned officer, operating a plane detecting device after hours, heard what sounded like a large flight of planes coming in from the northeast Reporting to an "inexperienced lieutenant" the latter "assumed the planes to be American and took no further action." Meanwhile General Short THOUGHT the navy was operating reconnaissance air-flights off shore (when it was not) and Admiral Kimmel THOUGHT the army was operating devices which would detect the sound of planes, when actually in .service a few hours a day I While for some reason, not clearly explained, the respective ex alted heads of both branches never compared notes, or even consulted regarding coordinated action ! MOW, of course, it is POSSIBLE, that all these in- dividual, from high to low, were negligent, in competent andor, on that particular Sunday morn ing, six or seven weeks ago were hopelessly plast ered, by the Hawaiian equivalent of bath tub gin. Negligence, incompetence or acute alcoholism would explain such a scandalous situation. But it is far more likely, in our judgment, that such a prevailing and widespread absence of competence, vigilance and awareness, was due to a SPREAD of the same scepticism and lethargy and sense of false security, that had infected the American people, ever since the start of the war, to the armed forces on land and sea. Oh yes, there were warnings and alarms from high places, orders to take note of this and that. Failure to do so was inexcusable, in fact reached a state of negligence that was criminal. Tragic a3 the fate of the two commanding officers, General Short and Admiral Kimmel is no one can read the report and not agree they are only getting what they deserve. Nevertheless, we believe if the American people as a whole, had not been so slow to wake, up to the dangers of the war; of it striking this country in a vulnerable place when least expected, our armed forces would not have been caught as seriously nap ping or in such a tragic way, that good Sunday morn-' ing. The only alternative at least to that conclusion is this, i.e. : Not only was the supreme commander of the American navy, and the general in command of the aimed forces in Hawaii completely, in fact, criminally incompetent, but the command of the U-boat patrol, the officer in charge of airplane detection and other subordinate officials, whose duty it was to be on the alert and ready for trouble at such a time, were also incompetent THERE is no doubt that when the storm broke, all forces from high to low, behaved with the cour age, resourcefulness and skill expected of the Ameri can army and navy in time of peril and in accordance with our finest traditions. So we prefer to believe that our armed forces, in Hawaii and elsewhere in stead of being honeycombed with incompetence and then (in which case they would be now) they merely suffered from that "sleeping sickness" which for some strange reason afflicted the entire country, ever since World war No. 2 started. So as that sneak attack on Devember 7 entirely snapped the army and navy out of it it also com pletely awakened the rank and file of the American people. If this is correct then history may well point out, that the tragedy at Pearl Harbor, destructive and de- Jilorable as it was, was really a blessing in disguise, or it was responsible for at last arousing that sleep ing giant, the United States, to the figUing pitch NECESSARY to win the war! MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, awake now, as a result of an incredibly shocking the lethargy which existed been compared to the state aV eV a Me-V) WeVWlV 111 W V O btates that somehow war didn't oh well, the "Mag- money-boys would hold," these devices were only Personal Health Service y WUUaaa Signed hum pertaining I pareeael RealtR and hyfttae. aa t alaaaaa eiagaosL. r trealmeat, erUI ke aanejered ay Or. Brady If a Ruprt (elf. RddraaM aanlop k Ramus, untm akaaM fca kftof aaS wrttlaaj la lak Owing to Ik bvfs a km bar af Mtert racairae rrij a raw tea he Rntwarad hers. K repl? can he auvet te quartan not conforming la laatroctloas. Aoaiena pr. wuiiam avadj. ses El Camlae, bmwIj Hills. Calif. HOW ARE YOU ML Hood, Ore., reader says he found nothing about chil blains in my booklet "Care of the Feet" . He suffers ' every winter from chilblains, be ginning with the first frost, and right now his toes are red and swol len and he is in misery work' ing outdoors. He'd be thank ful for any ur.eraay, nelp. "Care of the Feet" deals with pronated feet (weak ankles). flat feet, exercises for correc tion of these conditions, dangers In using arch props, the selec tion of proper footwear, bun ion, corns, calluses, sweating feet, hammer-toe, ingrown nail, French heels, shortened tendon of Achilles, burning of the feet, foot itch, painful heel, chi ropody, going barefoot, wearing rubber heels or soles, etc., but true enough, I wrote the book let In the good old summer time and frostbite was far from my thoughts then. What do you ex pect for 10 cents and a stamped addressed envelope anyway? Chilb lain is inflammatory swelling or sore or blister pro duced by cold. In other words it is frostbite. If the skin merely reddens, smarts, itches and aches it is first degree frostbite, comparable with first degree burn, which merely causes flush ing, reddening and Irritation of the skin. If blisters form it is second degree frostbite and more serious because the blisters open the way fer infection, if the condition is not carefully treat ed with a view to preventing infection. Here there is room only to consider prevention of chilblain or frostbite. In another talk we'll describe the treatment Most Important factor of chil blain or frostbite of feet Is mois ture. Dampness from without getting shoes and stockings wet) or dampness from within excessive sweating of feet) in creases conductivity of heat in foot covers and hence speeds cooling of the feet and-favors frostbite. Of course poor circu lation in the legs and feet in creases susceptibility to frost bite. Excessively heavy or too warm foot cover such as rubber over shoes when they are not neces sary to keep shoes and stockings dry, make the feet sweat too Kelly's Comment From Washington. D. C Army Air Crashes Seen "Percentage" Women May Have Uniformed Corps Leaders Would Get Good Pay , Br John W. Kelly Washington, D. C, Jan. 26. Officials are loath to admit that the army bombers cracking up have anything to do with sabot age. If they think so, they are careful not to speak. Navy de partment denied a couple of years ago that there was sabot age on new cruisers and other warships, although material was placed in machinery which had no business there Just as lines on airplanes became clogged by rags In gasoline tanks, when It is Impossible for rags or pieces of waste to get into the tank without being tossed in. The bomber wrecked recently near Pendleton, Ore., airport with loss of eight men; the loss of another bomber in the rugged tlmberland In southwestern Washington last year are consid ered accidents by the army a r corps. The flying division of the army expects these accidents to occur and figures on a percent age of Interceptors, light and me dium bombers being wrecked with loss of life. No day passes but what somewhere in the United States, or the ocean off shore, planes go down and fliers are killed. Only the war depart ment has a complete list of the accidents and casualties; only a few of the tragedies reach all the newspapers, yet always there Is a report. As the army officials put It, the more the air force Is expand ed the greater the number of ac cidents, but the ratio remains ap proximately the same as in pre war days. Army fliers have a different training than the com mercial pilots. Pilota of the big commercial planea do not stunt, cut didoes or experiment to see what they can do with their ship. They ara exceedingly cautious. V;..-5t: Brady. M. D. R CHILBLAINS? much and so favor cold feet and frostbite. Many persons ob sessed with the quaint notion that dampness causes illness (other than frostbite) suffer much unnecessary discomfort from chilblains in this way, Footwear that Is too tight im pedes the circulation and so favors development of frostbite. Wool, cotton, sflk, linen, paper and leather are poorer heat con ductors, hence better Insulators than rubber, at least when they are dry, and hence give better protection against frostbite. QIYSTIONS ANSWERS Era Waah Would hot water from tb fkuoat ba. sat to w for mixing borte Retd solution for r wrrd If th watar has a aughtly jaUowlan color, prob ably nut from tha water baawrT (A. t. W.) Answer Tas. Tha trace of Iron In It would havR no appreciable err act. for rtr drops or eyn wash una a rounded teaapoonful of bono add to tha pint of boiled water and make up fresh solution frequently. Always hare It comfortably warm when you UN It. salt la It b armful to an Rged person to live without salt for acre ml years? (K. T. H.) Answer One cannot live without alt. It is perfectly harm lets for any one tO'.depend entirely on the salt naturally present in such foods as milk. eggs, meat and flan, without adding any In cooking or at table. Many take too much salt, which tends to keep body waterlogged, re taining excess of water In blood and Ussues. Boy Beaemblea Patsy Here la a snapshot of my boy, aged 33 months. I thought you might agree that he resembles your Patay. He la a very healthy boy, thanks to your fine Brady Baby Book. Of course I don't think any one's baby will look ilka Patsy by following your book, but the baby win eertalnly hare Tltel (Mrs. O. C.) Answer Thank you Ma'am. There la a striking resemblance to Patsy at that age. Patsy la all years old now and I'm not at all aura she really believes In Santa Claus or Just humors the old folks who seem to dote on that stuff. Olsd to aend any reader who asks for It and Incloses ten cents and stamped envelope bear ing bis address, copy of latest edition of the Brady Baby Book. Nicotinic Arid and Canker Sores Recently you said nlcotlnlo add helps canker sores. 1 suffer from constantly recurring canker sores. (C. P. J.) Answer Try taking 100 mg. of nlc otlnlo acM dally for several days say one 30 mg. tablet or two such tablet three or four times dally. (Copyright 194a. John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing te communicate with Dr. Bretfy should send letter direct lo Or. William Brady, M. D. tRS El Camlno. Beverly HUM. Calif. ground planes when the weather Is not propitious and take every precaution for the safety of their payload. Army fliers, trained for com bat, of necessity take chances. Their business is to fight and dis regard personal safety whenever that becomes necessary. Crashes of bombers in the northwest, however, have occurred on trips which were as a matter of fact as a commercial flight. The north west, with its mountains end wil derness of forests, lacks a suffic ient number of emergency land ing fields, and when something goes wrong there is small oppor tunity for the pilot to find a place to set down his ship. These accidents will occur many times In the northwest in the future. It is the percentage. Cost of a heavy bomber Is about $400,000 (without ord nance); of a light bomber $175, 000, and for a pursuit plane about $100,000. These are sup posed to be minimum prices, see SOMETIME this year young women of Oregon and Washing ton may have a chance to get into uniform as an auxiliary of the army. Rep. Edith Norse Rog ers, Republican, has sponsored I a bill to use women in the army. The bill, now resting in commit tee, was regarded as "one of those things," but now high ad ministration officials are study ing it seriously and administra tion is expected to be behind It The enlisted women, it is ex plained, could take over a large part of the routine paper work in cantonments, air groups and similar non-combat Jobs, releas ing men for fighting purposes. With encouragement appearing for the bill, military tailors are now designing what they con sider a serviceable uniform, part of which is a short skirt, but no slacks. Another plan for releasing young men for fighters will be the establishment of 50 military police battalions, probably 90, 000 or more men. The program is advocated by Secretary of War Stimson. who wishes the military police to take the place of guards at shipyards, munitions plants, etc.. where bayonet-carrying regulars are now assigned. Most of the members of military police battalions would be re cruited from veterans of the first world war who are too old for active combat but whose training JANUARY 26, 1942. makes them particularly quali fied for guard duty, It is not the Intention to have the military po lice supplant the home guard of ! the several states, for tht y would be regularly enlisted men, drawing army pay and uniform ed and provisioned by the army, e e e THE secretary of war would establish training schools for the officers pf the women's corps In the event the bill now being con sidered Is enacted. During the period of training tha pay would be $50 a month, plus subsistence. On graduation, the top officers would receive 12,000 a year, sec ond In rank $1,575, and third, $1,900. Lower down would be the leaders (non-commissioned) with pay ranging from $884 for senior leader to $720 for Junior leader. ' The enlisted personnel would draw army pay of $21 a month. The director of women's corps, possibly with the rank of colonel is tentatively listed at $3,000 a year. The number of women to be used in the auxil iary has not been determined, but would run into several thou sands. If the bill carries special dormitory facilities must be pro vided for the fair sex wherever they are located. News Behind The News by Paul Mallon (Continued Prom Page One) ler is overplaying his troubles to the world (not letting any of the rumors escape at home, mind you) in order to spar for time to prepare new offensives, a a a MOTE Berne, Switzerland, is " another official phony-humor hotbed, but not as hot as Stock holm. The Swiss feel freer to regulate the correspondents of Der Dortmund Bladder, etc., and hold them down. They have, for Instance, suppressed circula tion of foreign legation "news letters" which are freely distrib uted In Stockholm. e e e NOT through Stockholm, but In more trustworthy way, comes information of how the German belt is tightening ever tighter. Sometime ago the nazis requi sitioned 10,000 tons of French cheese with a promise to deliver 300,000 tons of potatoes In re turn. This was three times as much cheese as their previous contract required. The nazis needed the cheese as concen trated food for their army in Russia. They got the cheese, but before the potatoes could be de livered the nazis Informed the French such a potato shortage had developed that the French not only would have to forget about receiving any, but would have to give the nazi 600,000 tons Instead. German potato crop this past season was supposed to be 85 million tons compared with 70 millions the previous year. But an early freeze an d the labor shortage ruined much of the sup ply. Grimmest Joke in Germany Is about frost-bitten potatoes, but before the end of the winter, it will be no joke. e a a UOTE One thing the Germans do not lack is, champagne. Weekly purchases (In worthless special marks, of course) have run around 350,000 bottles. French records show they had delivered to then Germans at the end of last May 15,000,000,000 bottles of champagne. e e a OTRONG man behind the Rio " conference was Brazil's Prl. dent Vargas. The public has neara more snout nis f oreign Minister Aranha, but It was Var gas In nerson who resisted the strongest pressure of the axis. The Italian . ambassador first told Aranha January 13 that Jaoan would declare war on Rra. zil if she Joined us in severance of diplomatic axis relations, r.r. tain axis diplomats came around four days later to see Vargas himself with stronger hints that Germany and Italy too would do likewise. Vargas personally showed them the door. It took quite a bit of courage. Brazil la nearest Latin point for axis invasion and has a substan tial axis population. Its presi dents do not get elected and run the country freely for four years, but as they say pointedly below the equator, must "keep on the alert." a a a BRITAIN'S Insiders calculate the nazi losses In Russia at 2.000,000 (killed, wounded, pris oner) but our authorities figure 3.000,000. Either way Hitler has lost one-fourth to one third of his total scattered army. Yet the Russian spokesmen hereabouts are far less elated than the dispatches from Mos cow. The largest portion of the red Industrial area is still in Ger man hands. "TELL THE WORLD" Pree book by twnlTS author telltng how almple use of a product from the earth released them from the mierry of Psoriasis. IVtems. Athleta-s Poot. A one. Vaneose llrere. Iwh ! Poison Cat. Call at West side Phar inecy for jrour tree copy. Commiimcations Bess Misinterpreted , To the editor Your interesting editorial of January 22, entitled "It Demaree Bess a Liar?" highlights a feud of many months' standing be tween the Portland Oregonlan and the Saturday Evening Poet The Oregonlan, like the under signed, was interventionist minded long before Pearl Har bor. The Post, of course, was strongly isolationist, and Its pet foreign correspondent, Demaree Bess, was not only isolationist, but on suspiciously good terms with the nazis, as witness his be ing allowed Into Poland some thing like a year ago. Only a short time before the United States openly entered the war, Bess wrote, In the Novem ber 22, 1041 Pott. "The truth Is thst the war IA Europe Is not black and white but a dirty gray." In other words, Bess felt thst Germany has as much right on her side as England, or pos sibly more. This Is remislscent of Lind bergh, who never, so far as I know, censored the nazis. The land of the concentration camp, the gestapo, the pogrom, the book-burning, was preferred by Lindbergh, end probably by Bess, to the land of the Magna Carta, of parliament, and of Hyde Park. It Is understandable that there Is no amiability on the part of the Oregonlan towards Bess or the Post that would prohibit the appellation liar; but I believe liar is too blunt word under the circumstances. Mlsinter preter is better. I personally have derived valuable informa tion from Bess, in spite of re sentment. In Bess' last article, the most glaring misinterpretation lies in his discussion of the German re treat In Russia. Belittling the Russian offensive power and the rigors of winter, Bess explains Hitler's retreat thus: "With un seemly haste, German armies be gan to pull out of their eastern most positions In Russia, with drawing so fast that they un necessarily wasted materials and men." Presumably, Bess would have us believe this withdrawel was occasioned solely by Japan's eas ing pressure on eastern Russia as a concomitant of her war elsewhere. Doublets the Rus sians did profit by this easing snd by their secret understand ing with Japan. But to say that the Germans "pulled out" when in truth they were pushed back is, if not an out and out lie, a perversion of the truth. It is obvious, of course, that the whole tone of the Bess article in question, 'The Axis Is a Myth," is calculated to bolster the rectitude of Bess and the Post's previous Isolationism. If there is no teamwork among the dictators, the Post would have us believe that their menace to wards the United States has been exaggerated. But a pack of wolves is still a pack of wolves, for all that they will turn on one another at the first likely opportunity. Almus Prultt. The Star Spangled Banner To the editor: Since an article appeared in this newspaper on the singing of our national . anthem and the question of whether or not it was difficult for the average voice, many have expressed their opinions to the writer. Some say it is hard to sing and that ia all there is to it, others declare with considerable emphasis that the difficulty lies only in "men tal laziness" and that it would be good for everyone to rouse their latent efforts snd endeavor to reach that "difficult F," the top note in the song. Now comes the discovery that some time in 1840 around Me morial day, the Boston Herald printed a service version which was prepared for the army and navy to sing, which is in four flats and does not go higher than Answer tombs with Your Tribute to OA simple yet dignified service Is the last tribute et your love to those who have passed on. Such a service re mains a fond and lasting memory of your loved ones. We ere prepared to take on all the cares of the funeral arrange ments. Our years of experience is your guarantee of a funeral that has beauty aad dignity and yet Is net expensive. CONGER Funeral Parlors Pnnoa 1147 1U W. Mala St. ! E flat, and tW groups have used it in their patriotic singing with great success. w If modern composers of dance tunes and popular songs can take the most unusual liberties with the. works of such masters of music as Rubenstein, Schu bert, Chopin and others, it would seem that a slight change In The Star Spangled Banner, a change made in order that all may sing It, would be more than justified. Jeunesse Butler, Medford, Ore. Flight o' Time Medford and Jaeksoa Ceanty History from the rUee af the Mall Trlbona IS and te years ago- TElf YEARS AGO TODAY January 28. 1932 ask at was Mondsy) W Gov. Roosevelt of New York In lead for democratic presiden tial nomination with promises of support from west and south. Net marked fish causes uproar in angling circles. - Home owners told now Is tune to re-bulld and clean up ya' as sld to Jobless. Ashland youth with "a mania for guns" given a suspended sentence. Talent grange hear Dr. Relmer. Table Rock residents predict an early sprirfg, while others are waiting to see what the ground hog does. Clarence Pankey wins Elks club billiard tourney. the Rain predicted. - High 38, low 31. . TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January 26. 1922 (It was Thursday) President Harding and Secre tary of State Hughes has snubbed French envoy as reported in Lon don papers. Washington, D. aded by blizzard. C, is block- Militia called to Nebraska packing house strike district. British-Chinese war looms In Near East Ralph Hand defeats Rueben In title match at Gold Hill before big crowd. President Harding asks gov ernment bureaus to provide work for jobless during remaind er, of winter. Rain total .19 of an Inch, more predicted. High 47, low 33. REMCMMRI-A eertsln Dee. T when the Japs bombed Hawaii, Is commemorated at Lampl's new lapel pin set with pearl and bearing words. "Re member Pearl Harbor," on three streamers. Part of sale's funds go te Honolulu. Community Cheat. Defense) Savings Bonds! I DIGNITY Their Memory