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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1942)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1942. MedfofjvTribuni Publish., ky ICSDruRU PRINTING CO. . ft Nonb Hi St. fhonv 111! RoHEHT W RCHU E-lttor. KRNKHT R Otl8TH AF. Htnagtr. Rn(r4 aa Mcoad ! mailr at Mad Cora, Urtn. a1af Act at March I. 1 UHNCKIPTION By Mali la Arca: pally uiir am Datlr and jnlir-tu Daily and iurnlar ti Datly and tunrlay Ih BATCS i yaar I mwitiha... I motithg, . , I raa month I to month... Ik -UMAtnrA a ah land, Ctniral rami. Ji lekannvllia. Onid H'li. Rogua mar. 'hoaala, Talaal ft 1.4 B tnntar rouia: ptlly and unday tar It ionlh... .T DaJty ana aunoy w All tarma eaah ta Official ap at lha Oly ! M OfflrUI Paper ml Jar fcMa Caaaly MrMUKK OF THKMWHI4TFI1 I'M KM Bart lac rull laartf Win Tna aa-ata fr.aa it aiciuaivaiy atlilad 10 . uaa for pualleatloB til riiapatfhat rew.li.fi ta n r amar wig eradnad la ihia ppt. and alaa la tha local ni publtah.d htfin. AM rif hta for public. Ion ar apaciai 4tpatehaa haiata ara alaa raaaraad. HEMHIH OF IINITKP fWMI UEMHRR OF AUDIT HHRBAU OF CIRCULATION Arftrt1ttn "rr-",i,JiM WKST HOl.l .1 PA f COM PAN V. INC Or ... m Ntw York. CMraao. Pttrjrtt Poruaad. lu Lauia. Atlanta, vaaeaaw. " r MmU CI AT 1 0 II Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry .,AH,mMi Announces It ine au;"""''' does not want people to save tin-cans for war needs. It seems tin-cans when empty are no use, except to dump along a country road and tie to the rear-axle of the lead Ford of an invading shivaree. e e One of the Older Girls re ports she cajoled her bread winner into spading up the backyard Sun. The task left him too weak to dig the bomb shelter in the frontyard he has been talking about all winter. a The Axis gained 60 miles In Libya against the British Sun day and the Russians gained 35 miles against the Germans. Thus, the Allies lost only five miles, in the grand total, a a SUSPICIOUSI (Klamath Falls Herald) "The local girls are pretty nice from what we hear, but what we would like to know is when and how did the teams from various points find out about how nice they arc? The Klamath girls are, In the majority, tied up (steady). Looks as If someone will have to look Into this matter." a a One school of military thought holds the Nazis, after ten weeks of running, and get ting walloped by Soviet arms, are stronger than ever, and able to Invade from two to five dlf- ferent lands at the same time, 1 when they get ready, and the notion hits them. This don't mnke sense. Apparently the Russians are not knocking the hell out of Cermany, as report-1 ed, but knocking it back into them. I a a a I i An upstate paper reports "chaotic conditions prevailing In Mcdford." One has to go away from home, to find out whnt's going on in his own bailiwick. It's nice to be in the midst of chaos, and not know about it. a a With daylight saving effective next Monday, It's time for the bright boys of the pencils, to spring the first World War nifty on the subject, "Everybody will be day-lighted." a a In a Texas wrestling match, one of the contestants had his Jaw and a leg broken, and was unconscious for three days. Still a lot of people claim wrestlers "don't mean business." a a a "While coasting last night on BadRcr's Hill. Miss Margaret Uaccn and Miss Sallle Weeks were sliRlitly injured by their sleds colliding. Miss Bacon us taincd a cmfwyp vbgkqj xxfi... xzfi. (Durris Items). Cruel and unusua.'. a a a ALL OK. NOW "(Editor's Note In her art Icle of Nov. 18, Dorothy Dix likened marriage to a business concern and in carrying out her comparison used the term Bene dict & Co. to describe the state of matrimony, from which point she proceeded to advie periodic Inventory of assets of the home, avoidance of marital bank ruptcy, etc. The coincidence of name has caused annoyance and embarrassment to the Benedict tt Co., coal dealers of long and honorable standing In the com munity, particularly on the part of hasty readers who failed to grasp the point of the article There was of course no refer ence to the local concern Intend ed in the Dix column)." Ex change. Was Mail Tribune tul ads. Editorial Correspondence Chicago, 111., Jan. 31: Great nai nowing on wis: anow. mow, in the air and covering the Portland Rose windows with Jack . " w unionise. i" ing hard going along the right of ' To continue the Varsity gal saga, what would the Japi do to the U. S. army it they had her as a Mate Hart. So many dough boys tried to carry her luggage to the Parmelee bus, there was a small riot and the dusky "red caps" gazed at the spectacle wrily a few more like that and their ten-cent a package graft would go up In emoke where, incidently, it should gol The lad with a penchant for strong cigars, came in strong at the finish. And It was nothing but sheer bull-necked persistence, for he was about as prepossessing as a Sioux Indian suffering from poison oak. Nothing daunted him however, even the sour-puss porter gave up after 24 hours and ignored his "corona-corona" belching smoke in the car like a Pittsburgh and Akron freight engine. Strange, strange, we can imagine no worse life-companion than that know-it-all smart-alec, and all around cheap skate rough neck, but our last sight of him was taking a seat by the beauty in a bus bound lor the Canadian Pacific. He is due in Camp Grant, but will probably end up In Toronto, unless someone rescues the Idaho beauty, and kicks him Into a convenient snowdrift. (Yep Urandpappy Is all worked up and fears the nice little kid will eventually fall for some baboon like that, many of them do, they seem able to resist everything but PERSISTENCE!) Strange, too, from the other side of the triangle, or rather the hexagon. Miss Idaho, as before suited, was pleasing to look at but to be strictly accurate was no glamorous beauty and, as our onnnrtunities for observation were excellent we can also testify she had no "line", no humor, no brains at all, about the third j day we should have supposed even "Panatela Pete" would have lost some of his enthusiasm. But did he? Did any of the regiment? Not that one could witness. Ho-hum, I guess they ARE or they AREN'T, Just as some gsls no doubt can walk In a tiger's cage and the varmints will blink their eyes, and put their tails between their legs and Jump through flaming hoops, and another girl, outwardly about the same type, walking in the same cage would promptly be "et up." It's biological,' no doubt! m m We are grateful to Miss Idaho, however, for putting bit of human Interest Into what otherwise would have been an exceed ingly tiresome trip. The competition to take the young lady to meals Including breakfast was also keen, (and these army lads have no money to waste!) But Miss "I" apparently had been given strict Instructions about this, and always declined, In fact as far as we could observe she only had one meal a day, luncheon, but when she landed in Chicago she looked as fresh and frisky as when she boarded the "Rose" at Nampa, Idaho. (Perhaps that's the reason.) As a final word let It be stated the "Miss" was very much of the sweet, demure, self-contained type, tremendous poise, but none of that quality which once upon a time was termed "pep". She almost never caught a breath of fresh air at the train stops, sweetly declining at least half a hundred invitations, ditto offers of cigarets, if she had a lip stick she never played with it, But, boy oh boyl Had Miss Idaho at any given time, ordered any of these soldier boys to Jump off the train while it was going 75 miles an hour and MEANT it, The boy would have refused no doubt, but he would have been sorely tempted and apologized profusely for not having the guts to do it. Yes that was her type. Just one of the major miracles of this here life! And speaking of miracles where Is there a greater human miracle than the man who celebrated his 60th birthday yesterday, s-.ankiin rinionn Rnnvelt the one and onlv Third Term Presi dent of the United States! Yes, we lie life who more thoroughly ENJOYS being not only tne man or , the hour and the man of the year, but the man of the Twentieth r .h.n Mr Bonsnvelt And to lead a world war for What is, the RIGHT, does In the most inclusive sense or xne term, fill his cup of life, overflowing with satisfaction and hap piness. Had F.D.R. been allowed to order his role in life, we believe he would have selected the role he Is now playing, in preference to all others. and that, as we have read history, makes him trul' the "Miracle Man" of Modern Times. R.W.R. Kelly's Comment From Washington, D. C. New Bid Made for Aluminum Plant Additional Plant Rumored Needed Clays From Guiana Or From Utah Br John W. Kail, Washington. D. C, Feb. 3 Dour Id Nelson, dictator of the war production board (the set op was to be designated war p'oduction administration until someone said it would be re ferred to as a revived WPA), is being told that It might be a good thing for him to step In and send the aluminum rolling mill bark to the LaFollette peach orchard at Fairview if, us Nelson says, the big issue now Is rush production and not lose a minute. Mr. Nelson has been informed that shifting the Fairview Trout - tale mill to "somewhere bai-k of the mountains' is nutme ..atlonnl defense thousand of li.terceptor planes through de lay. The intended cajiacl" of the mills at Fairview and Los Angeles was calculated at 130. 'i00 tons of shevt aluminum a year, or 300,000 000 pounds. fhe sites were selected, pur chased, titles approved, ground leveled, plans drawn and con- p"""" tractors hired when came IVarl Pungent paragraph to Mr. Harbor, the consolidation of the Nelson in one of these corn two plants and their relocation muniques by a northwest sena in the upper Columbia region I lor: "To sum up the situation: rear the Hrltish Columbia line ! N'r Jor.cs (Jesse II. Jones of It is estimated. Mr. Nelson Is Informed, that Mils procrastina tion is delaying production of aluminum sheet meUU by at least four .nonths (plus the orig inal delay in picking the Fair view sitei, or a production loss 'on (then director of offire of of 50,0(10 tons, one-third the ca i production management); Mr. parity of the proposed Industry. Knudsen deferred to the army. Airplanes can not be constructed od the army disclaims any faster Ihnn the sluct aluminum responsibility." That was as is provided so that there is a : fear as the senator could dis clear loss, by the relocation, of I cover who actually was behind several thousand fighting planes. I the shifting of the plant. War department refuses to re a a a veal how many tons of aluml- Iclcloski! the Russian front everywnere, on u.e srounu, way. believe there is no man in pub- what he believes to be, and Inum Is used In an interceptor or a bomber; it Is now a military secret, although the figures were 1 frequently announced before the 'declaration of war against Ja- pan. At any event, Mr. Nelson has been told that 10,000 inter , ceptors is the price that is being 1 paid for shifting the fabricating ; mills, although a nearer guess might be S.000. a a a AT an executive session of i K subcommittee of the senate military affairs committee Mr. Nelson told senators the prest Hent has bestowed on him all authority possessed by the presi dent to get results; that there will be no politic In the war production board; that every thing necessary to tiring produc tion to the peak in the shortest possible time will be done. It was because of this testimony of Mr. Nelson that he was sent com muniques by a special "riding page" (this comes down from the days when senate mrssen cers rode horses) outlining the important loss of aluminum sheet for airplanes by reason of the change "back of the mountains." All of the prelimi nary work completed at Fair- ! vi,'w must be done over again 1 Bl Il,e nrw mcn n" 1,01 ''' b'n definitely chosen ' P'CKing tne sue, examining i ""' purcnase, new plans, awarding contracts. If Mr. Nel- to Justify itself. There are now son is so anxious to get pro-1 transmission lines available, but duction he could older the con- j KEA has requested priority on tractors to resume at Fairview. thousands of tons of precious save time, save fighting planes ' copper wire to build a duplicat tthich would be completed and ir.g line (which has been dl overscas in combat before the I approved by the power division P1""' "behind the mountains" tiFO, whom I originally be- ieved was the determining f.ietor of the matter, deferred to Judge Patterson (assistant secretary of war); Judge Pat terson deferred to Mr. Knud AMONG the rumors floating Personal Health Service Br WUUam ,.,.,. .. tMtn trw,u ml; ,, 7MIHH , . Mmpt4 w.! addreasaa eaveiove le mmt Letters owing ta the lare a amber f letters received nlf a rea can be antwered here. No reply can be aiade to qacrtee not conforming te Inttructlont. Addrn Dr. William Brady, tea CI Camlno, Bnrrty Ullla, Calif. GIVE THAT BABY A BREAK "I believe there would be far less respiratory infection from icoryza to pneumonia, meningitis and infantile p a r a 1 y a i s," (writes one . . . I wish I could say mother, but the truth is that the writer is a f a th e r) "i f people would spend as much effort avoid ing contact with infected persons or pos of Infection as Dr. Brerly sible carriers they do in worrying about and trying to avoid drafts, damp ness, wet feet or insufficient clothing.." It would be more encourag ing to hear such an avowal from , mother, but then, we mu,t remember that mother Is more susceptible to and more exposed to the old hokum bunk um than father is the neigh' boorhood Saireygamps get in lthelr beEt lckg (ter (,ther has gone to work and mother is left alone with the children. Down at the office or shop Ben Told Is a bit different about sound ing off, but back home his wife Maria takes great pleasure in giving the young and of course inexperienced little mother an earful, "In our family," continues the young father, "our year old baby has had no illness of any kind despite the fact that she sleeps in a drafty, unheated room. She has never been bun dled or burdened with exces sive clothing or bed covers In the way most doting mothers feel is necessary, and this has let us in for a great deal of censure from friends, relatives and neighbors, who are forever warning us the baby will get pneumonia." A nice distinction there friends, relatives and neighbors. It would be even clearer if the friends were fairly qualified ts well-m caning but misguided friends. "The Irony of it Is that these same people would think noth jing of letting everyone and his w..u.c ...u ...c.r uu, or letting the baby play on a dlry oor where no stray draft -ould reach the baby. This young father has said all there is to say about the mat ter. But he is under no misap prehension concerning the pop ular view, for he adds "I have always believed your teachings are the truth, but I do not think you can hope to remove the deeply ingrained superstitions around in the national capital is one hinting that so great must be the aluminum ingot produc ts that additional plants, fi nanced by Defense Plant Corp. (RFC subsidiary of Mr. Jones) will be necessary to meet the demands for 60.000 airplanes in 1942 and 125,000 (100.000 com bat) in 1943. as announced by the president. In the Pacific northwest tentative sites are mentioned at Seattle or some where on Puget sound (Tacoma has a plant now building)- The Dalles, on Columbia river; Pen dleton. Chief factor in locating a reduction plant will be availa bility of electrical energy. Puget sound area is fed from Grand Coulee over transmission lines now building; The Dalles is within about 50 miles of Bonne ville, and Pendleton is served from Grand Coulee. Necessary clays from which to extract the metal wou'd be brought from Dutch Guiana, where a contingent of American troops is now guarding the bauxite fields, or other clay deposits in Utah. The Arkansas deposits of bauxite may be de veloped by rural electrification administration, which sees itself passing out of the picture unless it can do something in the war jof the war department). Communications Thanks From Board To the editor: The executive board of the Jackson County Public Health association wishes to thank you for your cooperation with them in the anti-tuberculosis seal sale campaign. Mrs. Charles Barnes. Secretary Labor's New Metiers To the editor: w Fully conscious of the part rions" written In Albany paper that labor unions, particularly and attributed to a contractor the A. F. of L . have Dlaved tnirnd builder. elevating the lal-oring classes to Brady. M. D. ,... . sKoald a brief ane wrlttea la Ink which the public so foundly cherishes." Certainly not I have learned that in a long campaign. But it Is gratifying to receive now and then such testimony as this young father gives, that my teachings do have some effect. The young father incloses a clipping of an article on air con ditioning in the home, by an old medical professor who has lately been set up health col- umning. The young father ca particular attention to the pro fessor's final paragraph: "Drafts are just as danger ous as too much or too little heat particularly if a person Is not robust" etc., etc. How can an M. D. write such guff? wonders the young father. Well, maybe the old professor is a bit addled about it, or again maybe that's the way the peo ple for whom he writes likes it. QI ESTlONB ANSWEBS Tic Doloureux Please giva your opinion of trl chloretDylene for tic doloureux. (R. J. H.) Answer Crude Trtcolorethylene, used as solvent for fata and reilna, lor dogreaslns metal surfaces and In clothes cleaning, was found to cause lose of sensibility In tha area sup plied by tha trigeminal (7th cranial. trifacial) nerve. It therefore came Into use as a remedy for tha violent stabbing pain recurring spasmodical ly every few minutes for hours or days. Tha victim keeps In po:ket sealed fragile tubes containing about IS minims of pure trlchlorethylene. breaka one In handkerchief and In halea It when attacked. It brings Im mediate, sometimes prolonged relief. Fruit Julree You stated that freshly expressed fruit Julcea lose part of their vitamin strength on atandlng exposed to the air. Would this be true of such Juice kept in a covered Jar In refrigerator over night? And of canned fruit Juice allowed to atand aeveral hours after opening the can? (W.H.H.) Answer Yea. Acid and Alkaline roode Will you kindly give tables of foods which leave acid ash and fooda which leave alkaline ash? (J. H. McL.) Answer In my opinion It la seldom If aver advisable to consider that circumstance In choice of food or diet. However, such Information Is included In tha 60-pire booklet "Feedere Digest" -for copy send twenty-five centa and stamped en velope bearing your address. Saccharin Where can one get directions for using saccharin instead of sugar? (Mrs. E. B. D.) A ewer A quarter of a grain of ssechsrtn. In tablet, has sweetening effect of about a teaspoonful of sugar. Any one may use up to four or five grains of saccharin dally with perfect safety. (Copyright 184J. John P. Dllle Co.) Cd. Noiei rerson, wishing te communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. n tin El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. respectability, and filled with a consuming hatred for our low born aristocracy of wealth whose philosophy has been the sanctification of greed, I wish to suggest that we may be go ing too far in the direction of unionization. Our American Ideal is free dom freedom for the individ ual to work, to play, to live in his own way in so far as it does not Interfere too much with the rights of others. In forcing men to pay tribute to union leaders as greedy and socially unconscious as were the wealthy aristocrats of the 1870 s they simply have changed slave masters without broadening the Ideal of freedom. Men arc not free when theKr labor is actually needed and they cannot obtain work without buying a union card. Labor unions today con sider a non-union worker a jreater enemy than the capital ist employer. Capital has prop erly acquiesced to the demands of labor and granted all reason able rights of working men. Unions then turned to fighting each other and now are making war against non-union labor. To fight laborers is not the proper function of organizations established for the purpose of benefiting labor. Their pi oner function should be to free labor from slavery and exploitation. :o obtain reasonable working hours and conditions, to force employers to pay In accordance with their ability to pay and secure for laborers tho Individ- "lf " 0t mF" ' ,r" u-i.:- ..j ...... fre .. . . I hi, V timnl. tia.'A .la..i.v4 I masters and recent demonstra - Itions of seme labor leader, in- dicate how dangerous it is l0 a free society for any consider able group of Its constituents to become servants of a group of radically anti-social, undemo cratic 'bosses " Russell Mitchell. Jacksonville, Ore. Iverson Sees Chaos To the editor: In last night's paper you had an article on "chaotic cor.di- 1 He evidently had been nere. investigated hi own line off work and right there found i tha chaotic condition that he , peaks of. ! Personally I know exactly where that chaos lie ai it i .lao, mv line of work and today right , lhe houelng prob- lem of our cantonment. I will mention diferent phases of it. In new building we do not know what is wanted (have not ka.n tnlrit anrf H, nnt biir.W I what rentals will be; or whether furnished or unfurnished. In existing houses we are equally at sea. There are rumors of control of rentals based on last April when ' rents hardly paid the taxes and water. In that case we could not be ex pected to do any extensive re pairing. We are also told that many cantonment workers of the common labor class can be classed with "fruit tramps" as to being desirable tenants, which means that they do not take the slighest care of the property. There is also a chaotic condi tion as to rooms. I am repeat edly asked by owners to see rooms they have and tell what I think of them. I quit seeing them long ago as I hate to tell them the truth most of those I have looked at needed kalso iriine and paint badly and most furniture was hardly fit to chop into fire wood. Secondhand dealers tell me that last tpring every stick of old furniture and furnishings were bought up to put into houses and rooms. We can well imagine the results. People coming to me looking for houses tell of houses they have looked at and above men tioned conditions exist in a very large part of them. I made brief inquiry locally and have also talked to various of the engineers who have been and are here, some of whom I have as tenants, and I find this: If the existing house or room would be capable of putting into desirable and clean condition, then there will be a demand by the better element and they will pay a decent price; and there will be a very acute short ige of residences in first class condition that the "higher uds" will not be ashamed to ask their friends into and they will nav high rent, and with that class of house we can furnish "Frigid- aires (if you can get them) and spring mattresse, etc. Here is my suggestion I think there should be an actual inspection of all available hous ing (houses and rooms) and sue gestions made to the owners as to wnat they should do to them and also advise as to rental they can ask. Many of the "land lords" have asked me questions on xnese matters and they should be cleared up. I would also suggest a meeting of the landlords with Mr. Van Dyke and others as the housing prouiem coum De cleared up, mere is also a very great shortage of new furniture and specially mattresses It seems to me mat there should be several hundred mattresses shipped in here as that will be the one ining of greatest need. This article covers a very live question at mis time and should be attended to, and SDeciallv some assurance to us landlords that we can expect a decent rental. Geo. Iverson Jap Envoys' Return Will Bejia Africa Washington, Feb. 3. (VP) The state department announced today that Japanese diplomatic and consular officials held in this country would be returned to Japan by way of Portuguese east Africa. The Portuguese government has been agreed upon to handle at Lisbon the exchange of repre sentatives of European belliger ents. FUNERAL SERVICE FOR NIEL ALLEN'S FATHER Grants Pass, Feb. 3. (3) Funeral services were held to day for W. C. Allen, 73, who died Sunday night. Allen was a state legislator in Washington and was co founder of the Pullman, Wash.. Herald. In Oregon he was a member of the state same and j inmi!,trial accident 'commissions, . Surviving are the widow and i:wo, ns' v- c- AlleI Jr., and Niel R. Allen, Oregon Republi can chairman. CORONER DYNASTY Charleston, S. C, Feb. 3. iiAF) Loroner John P. Devaux countTurthoue. tath. d" mu4 1. u -. . j . , "'", ... jic K.iitra o stay in ..me same bulldina where hi ' Z' J .. '"gnaIfnfr ZZ" """-nt"' coroners, wo. Send Valentines to Show You Care We have special cards for friends, sweethearts and lor all members of the family. SVVEM'S GIFT SHOP News Behind The News by Paul Mallon :Con4noed from rage One) senators is that Wickard did not write the back-tracking part of his Atlanta speech, that It was worked over by others, that he did not notice the line that caused all the trouble. Be that as it may or may not be, Mr. Wickard is Mr. Roose velt's personal agent and he must have noted T. D. R.'s nun mat he had better be good in his newly legalized position as arbi ter of farm prices. In short, Mr. wickard may have established himself as arbi ter tor the farmer (meaning in this instance the cotton senators and some farm arganizations) but he is working for Mr. Roose velt. In his dual capacity he will henceforth take the rap from both sides, as he has now so ef ficiently started to do. m ONE thing Churchill said In his speech is not understandable to anyone here. According to one radio transcript, he said: The arrival of well-equipped troops here will enable the U. S. to send direct to Australia and New Zealand, weapons and mu nitions now being made in the United States." Another published version: "The fact that well-equipped American divisions can be sent into these islands so easily and rapidly will enable substantial supplies of weapons and muni tions now being made in the United States to be sent directly to the other side of the world to Australia and New Zealand, to meet new dangers to the home defense which are cast upon them by the Japanese war. These words suggest Churchill expects Britain to receive less war materials, but obviously our own troops there will have to be supplied and nearly all our lend- lease material has been going to Libya and the far east anyway. No one here professes to know what he meant a e a NOTICE came to the war de- partment from the bureau of internal revenue, addressed to Major . It said the major, through error or oversight, owed more money on his income tax than he had paid. The bureau of internal revenue received this communication back from a war department secretary: "Major is at present lo cated on the Bataan peninsula. I am herewith returning your letter with the suggestion that you forward it to Major with the first reinforcements." Or, better yet, why not have the revenue agent deliver it out to the Philippines and take all revenue agents along as rein forcements before next March 13. Silent official emotions here have run all the way from re gret to outrage that MacArthur could not be relieved before this, but this war department secretary has given first expres sion to the sentiments of those in the latter group. However, a bill is being push ed in congress to relieve irmv officers from income tax while outside the continental limits of the U. S. The major will have to pay up if and when he gets back and no doubt he will be glad of the opportunity and proud or the privilege. SCOTLAND BOMBED London, Feb 3 P) A wom an was killed and several per .ons were injured Monday after- when a single air raider bombed and machine-gunned streets of an east Scotland village. The Apostolic Faith Church REV. C. W. FROST, Pastor Ann A Special Service for Wednesday Evening, at the church en the corner of 3rd and North Central, at 7:45. Reverend R. R. Crawford, General Overseer of the) Apostolic Faith Work, assisted by John L. Clasper and a group of Gospel Workers from Portland, Oregon. Following an organ prelude, there will be special music by the 30-piece Orchestra. Special Song by Walter Reid. Portland. Tenor, and Reverend Crawford will also be featured at this service. IVIRYONI IS WILCOMI NO COltiCTIONS Flight o' Time Medfera and Jarkaoa Caanry Blstary fro a. the riles af the Mail Tribes I and years ecu. TEH YEARS AJO TODAY February 3. S32 at was Wednesday) Ashland CofC. builds tobog gan slide on Slsklyous, Ralph G. Jennings file for sheriff on Democratic ticket. Great powers emphatic in de nouncing Japanese aggression in China. Chinese sink Jap anese destroyer. Gov. Roosevelt of New York, Democratic candidate for presi dent, tells Grange he is "now against the League of Nations," though he worked for It when a vice presidential candidate. C. B. Lamkin of Ashland, ta be sworn in county Judge next Monday. Unsettled with rain or snow. High 44, low 34 degrees, and slightly warmer. Earthquake spreads death and destruction in Chile. Salem high to play two game with Black Tornado here during week-end. Oak Grove to get Medford water. Six planes to stop here daily with new service starting April I. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY February 3. 1S22 (It was Friday) January was a cold month with precipitation below nor mal. Snow or rain predicted with a high of 42 and a low of 30 degrees. Prosperity of nation waits revival of railroad business. Secretary Hover says. Jury disagres for second time in trial of Fatty Arhuckle. film star. Movie queens and notables involved in mystery murder of William T. Taylor, film director. Film beauties questioned. Ciga- lette stub only clue. Treaties between Japan and China agreed upon at disarma ment conference. District Attorney R a w 1 e Moore is 111 at his home with a bad cold. Over a million dollars spent on local roads last year. Sams Valley residents are shocked when a phone wire and power line become crossed when pole is hit by a truck. Homeguards Capture B.B.C. Headquarters London, Feb. 3. (Pi Head quarters of the British Broad casting Corporation, supposedly one of the best-guarded build ings in Britain, was captured at 4 a.m. yesterday by home guards engaged in exercises. The attack began at midnight and was finished by the success ful entry of two home guards armed with bogus passes one signed "Adolf Hitler." Eugene, Feb 3 (VP) J. Hugh Pruett, University of Ore gon astronomer, reported today that he had observed a lunar rainbow in the western sky Sat urday night. Pruett said observa tion of the phenomenon was rare. TIRE TRAGEDY Molalla, Ore., Feb. 3 (") Charles Falconer views the war and its resulting rationing as a personal tragedy and with some reason Fire destroyed his automobile, trailer and seven "tires. ounces