Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 26, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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    SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
Your Health and It's Care
By OR. WILLIAM BRADY. M.D.
Readers ghould address Inquiries toi Dr. WiJIiaro Brady.
265 CI Camino Bererlr Htlla. Calii.
IT CAN'T BE HOME
Th nroDosal that childlessness
hn.iiH ha taxable alter three
years of barren marriage
is
based on the
assu m p 1 1 o n
that any per
son who Is
physic ally,
morally ana xv
nanclally qual
ified or fit to
begin raising a
family. It is
fair and rea
sonable to per
mit a newly
married couple
Brady
to enjoy ex
emption from such taxation for
three years. After that they
should pay an annual tax of ap
proimately one-tenth of their
income until such time as they
have a child or adopt one. All
revenue from this source is to
be distributed by the state as a
bonus, subsidy or an endowment
to parents of young children and
persons having adopted children.
. It is a more or less recognized
principle of practice to put the
newly married couple on tnree
years' probation, so to say, be
fore even considering the possi
bility of a barren marriage. This
is a sound rule to follow in all
ordinary clrcustances.
If conception has not occurred
in that time, then, and only then,
is it fair or advisable to seek
medical advice. For in such
event, it is reasonable to assume
that (1) the marriage has not
been consummated, (2) the hus
band is sterile, (3) the wife is
sterile, or (4) both are sterile.
Mind, now, this does not im
ply that anybody is at fault or
anything is wrong if conception
fails to occur in three years, or
in six years, or even in ten
years. I had a letter a short time
ago from a woman who was very
happy she had finally been
blessed after fifteen years of
seemingly barren marriage. Na
ture is capricious sometimes.
Another fact to keep in mind
Is that human beings are only
relatively fertile; that is, man or
woman may be absolutely ster
ile, feebly fertile or highly
On the Radio Chain
STATIONS
Chain affiliation and where the;
are on the dial:
KALK (MUH) 13)0, Portland; KEX
IAIIC) 1 ISO, Portland: KUO (ABC)
110. San Francisco; KGW (NBC)
(20. Portland; KJR (ABC) 1000.
Seattle: KNX (CBS) 1010. Los An
geles; KOA (NBC) (150, Denver;
KOIN (CBS) S70 Portland: KOMO
(NBC S0, Seattle: KPO (NBC) 0,
San Francisco; KSL (CBS) 1100, Sail
Lake Illy.
Time Shown It PWT.
TUKSDAT
0-OC p m. Terrv and Pirates, ABC;
OK For Release NBC; News, MBS;
This Man Name Jordan CBS.
5-15 p m. Dick Trace ABC: Super
man MBS; Betty and Bob, NBC.
:J0 p m. Date With Judy, NBC:
Jack Armstrong, ABC. Harry Flan
rtery News, CBS: Adventures of Tom
Mix MIIS.
0:45 p. m. Rosa Rio
6:U0 -. m- Uaitrle! Heatter. MBS:
lnnei Sanctum, CBS Guy Lombardo.
ABC. Mystery Theater NBC.
6 15 p m. Jimmy Fldler, MBS.
:'J0j m. Fibber McGee and Molly,
NBC- Silurios Amlgoa, ABC; American
Forum. MHS: The Doetnr Fights, CBS.
Bands, MBS; The Doctor Fights, CBS.
7:00 p m The Man Called X, NBC:
Rumner Wellea, ABC. Service, to the
Front CBS.
7.15 p m. Lowell Thomas, MBS.
7-30 p. m. An Evening with Rom.
berr NBC: Red Rider, MBS; One
Man's Family, ABC.
0.00 p m Supper Club. NBC; Jack
Klrkwood Show CBS- Ted Malone,
ABC
8 IS p m. Fleetwood Lawton, NBC:
Mlmlc. CBS: Lum and Abner ABC.
8 30 p m. Johnny Presents, NBC:
Theater of Romance CBS; Alan
Young Show, ABC: AueUon Gallery.
MBS
0 00 p m. Everything for the Boys,
NBC: big Town. CBS: Glen Hardy
News MBS.
0 15 . m. Rea Millet, MBS.
II .10 p m. Murder Will Out, ARC.
10 00 p m. News. NBC: Fulton
Lewis MBS; Chaille Chan, ABC.
10:15 i, m On our Handstand, NBC;
Sports Program, ABC.
10 30 p m Edwin C Hill. CBS: Fen.
remans Nile Club, ABC; Sweetheart
SwIneNme. NBC.
1100 Talks, CBS: News, NBC;
News, ABC.
nKDNESOAT
5:00 p m. Terry and Pirates, ABC:
OK ror Release. NBC; This Man
Named Jordan, CBS: News, MBS
5:15 p m Dlek Trac. ABC, Super
man, MIIS: Betty and Bob, NBC
5 30 p m Jack Armstrong. AHC;
Nelnnn Prlngle. News CHS: Adven
tures ol Tom Mix MHS. News, NBC.
5:45 p m. Elmer Peterson, NHC.
Weill News Wire MBS. Capt. Mid
night AHC; News CHS
6 00 p m Rav Noble, CBS: Eddie
Cantor. N1IC; Gabriel Heatter, MHS
6:30 p m Mr District Attorney
NBC Detect and Collect, CBS; Spot
light Bands, MHS
7 00 p m Kay Kyser's Kollege.
NBC, Great Moments In Music, CBS
7 15 p m News MBS
7:30 p m. Let Yourself Oo, CBS;
Lone Rmser, MHS.
8 00 p m Supper Club. NBC; Jack
Klrkwood Show CHS1 Main Line.
MHS; Lum and Abner, ABC.
6 15 p m rieetwoot Lawton, NHC:
Henry Mn.se Orchestra. CBS; Main
Line MIIS, News. ABC.
..',l 1.JH Th Mrs Feather.
iiB-. ram; counterspy, AHC; Or
Chrlstlar CBS: Fresh Up Show, MHS
00 n m Mr and Mrs North. NHC.
The Stint, CHS; Newa. MBS; Spot-1
lighting the War ABC
J 15 o m Golden Harmonies. AHC
30 o m Arch onoier Plays, MHS I
eJ'00.JPm "em. NBC: Charlie'
Chan ABC: Fulton Lewis, MBS
MiJ
Dr.
YICK SO CHINESE HERB CO.
er-
t. H. LE0NG. Herbi
Tuesday, June 26. 1945 1
WITHOUT CHILDREN
fertile. And remember, too, that
the degree of fertility may vary
from season to season or from
year to year, and it may vary
with impairment of general
health, and a man or woman
may be sterile despite apparent
perfect health.
It should hardly be necessary
to mention that fertility or in
fertility or sterility in most in
stances is not dependent on sex
ual potency or impotency. That
is partly implied by the state
ment that sterility may occur
despite apparently perfect health
and vitality.
For the happiness of all con
cerned it is unfortunate that
sterility is commonly considered
a "female" trouble. As one gyne
cologist s (physician who limits
his practice to diseases of worn.
en) observes: "The term female
sterility implies that husbands
are usually fertile, whereas in
my own experience more than
half the husbands must either
share or accept full responsibil
ity for a childless union." This
specialist goes on to explain that
pnysicians must be more critical
in evaluating the test for male
fertility.
This, I hope, is enough to say
nere about pampering the mas
culine ego. Marriage is a fifty
fifty contract and if or when the
question of sterility arises it is
up to the husband, to consult the
pnysiclan first.
QUESTIONS ANSWERS
RIMtr
i.8??1 A.11 noe b,eJ 'rom the
lightest blow, and the bleeding recurs
for -many days even when he lust
blows hli noce. Does this Indicate
aome deficiency? (Mrs H F )
Answer No. More likely the boy
has rm.re or less chronic rhinitis On
flammntion of nasal lining) or other
mnur nose or inroar trouble which
keeps the lining membrane congested.
The bleeding Is narmless. Just he sure
the boy gels his dally ration of cal
cium ana sunsmne vitamin u.
Hlsreh
Sixteen months old baby Insists on
eating starch when I starch the
ciotnes (M. D. L Jr.)
Answer Next the baby may Insist
on going out roistering nishta . . .
you had belter draw the line some
where. Starch is not narmful, but the
pure stuff is not adequate nourish
ment. Instead give the baby oats in
any lorm, raw oi cooxea, or plain
wheat, raw or cracked and slightly
cooked These will nrovlde the mln.
erals and the vltnmlns needed for me
tabolism of starch and for maintaining
vlte.
(Copyright 1045 by John F. Dllle Co.)
man'a Nite Club ABC-. Sweetheart
Swlngtlme, NBC; Excerpts from great
Music, MBS.
11:00 o m News. ABC; Orchestra.
cbh: Hotel BUtmore orcn., NHC.
Soldier Prisoner
Brutally Beaten
Is Solon's Charge
Washington, June 28 (U.R)
Rep. Leon H. Gavin, R., Pa., told
the house today that a soldier-
prisoner at the Lincoln, Neb.,
army air base was beaten uncon
scious with an M.P.'s club be
cause he was not working fast
enough.
"The hospital records, I under
stand," Gavin said, "showed con
cussions of the jaw, shoulders,
arms and legs."
3avin said that a house mili
tary affairs committee investiga
tion had uncovered at Lincoln
"a number of other (such) beat
ing cases," which, he said, in
volved "privates, non-commissioned
officers, and even a chap
lain."
Gavin asserted the War de
partment had assured him that it
will punish the "officers and en
listed men who stood by and
took no action for protection of
this boy."
About all the army has done
thus far, he said, is transfer Brig.
Gen. Earlcy E. W. Duncan, the
commandant of the field at the
time of the beating.
KLAMATH DESPERADO
FACES GAS CHAMBER
Vale, Ore., Juno 28. (U.R)
Kenneth Bailey, 28-year-old Kla
math Falls, Ore., desperado, to
day faced death in the gas cham
ber at the Oregon penitentiary
at Snlom.
He will be sentenced to death
Wednesday at 10 a.m., by Circuit
Judge M. A. BIrrs. A jury early
Sunday morning convicted
Bnlley of the first degree murder
01 SRt. Ted Chambers of Ontario.
an OreRon state policeman, shot
to deal ii m a gun battle near
Welser, Ida., last April 29.
One Of th nlrft mnnrtamtm'm
clubs in the United States The
National Rifle Assn. was organ
ized in 1871.
PARTS and SERVICE
tor all makes ut wakhfrb.
and RKKKIClr'.H ATOKS
YOUNGER'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE CO.
31 N. Bartlett. Phone 3419
REMEDIES FOR STOMACH ULCERS
Hort. Rheumatism. Asthma Catarrh
PIlM Prostate Oland Ecsema and all dig.
ordert ol Lleer Kidney Trouble and
ithel eompltmts dleappear attet using.
CHINESE KERBS
Removed to Sparta Bldg.
Phone 5817
Germany Blasted and Burned
Beyond Belief By Big Bombs;
City After City Only Rubble
By Lyl. C. Wilton
United Press
Staff Correspondent
(Copyright, 1945, by United
Press)
Inside Germany, June 28
(U.R) Conquered Germany has
been burned and blasted beyond
belief or recognition. Fifty per
cent of the buildings in the
greater cities have been knocked
down or burned. Many cities are
a shambles far into the reich,
miles beyond the range of our
artillery or the areas reached by
ground troops before Germany
surrendered. The bridges, the
cities, the great industrial plants
lie in broken rubble.
Beneath the ruins of German
buildings lie tens of thousands
of bodies. Through the streets of
thena dead cities rtlnd bomb-
punchy men and women1. Only
the little children seem always
to be gay and happy.
. Closo-Up Shows Ruin
In a 1,000 mile journey by
plane and jeep I saw blasted
Germany close-up from the air
and close-up from the ground
Cologne, Essen, Mulheim, Duls-
berg, Nuremberg, Hannover,
Magdeburg, Bremen, Hamburg.
Braunschweig, Ludwigshafen
Munich they are fair examples
of what bombs can do. Cologne
is nearly obliterated except for a
ring of inhabitable buildings
around the outer fringe but the
great cathedral remains upright.
You can ride for blocks through
Hamburg streets and see only
ruins in any direction.
In the larger cities, the people
double up with three or more in
a single room. There are cellars
beneath wrecked apartment
houses In which families live
now and must live through the
hard winter to come.
This ruin inside Germany, far
forward from the final battle
lines was achieved by the Uni
ted States strategic air force and
the Royal Air Force Bomber
Command. For short the former
is known as USSTAF. a deadlv
organization commanded by Gen.
can a spaatz Sometimes it was
called the Spaatzwaffe.
RAF at Night
Operating , at night, RAF
bombers plastered the cities. It
was the RAF more than USSTAF
which accounted for the wreck
age of German towns. RAF tech
nique was to come over the city
tarket in the darkness. The
British had devices which could
locate the center of a big urban
area with sufficient accuracy.
Over the target the RAF let
'em go great B.OOO and 12,000
ton bombs. The blasts were ter
rific. Germany's cities died that
way
USSTAF bombed by day.
British filers scoffed when
Spaatz arrived In England In
June of 1942 to set up the first
American air force to strike at
Germany. The British had tried
daylight bombing at the outset
of the war Complacent Germans
told m about that when I visited
Germany in 1941. The British
came over on a tew daylight
raids and were murderously
turned back by a combination of
fighter opposition and great
concentration of flak.
Day Raids Opposed
By the time Spaatz and his
first bombers arrived the RAF
was on an exclusively night
time schedule. One of Britain's.
top airmen greeted Spaatz with
this question.
"How do you propose to oper
ate, general?"
"We're going to bomb 'em by
day " Spaatz replied.
Go ahead and get your nose I
IN ASHLAND
Remember Our Service Department
Free Estimates Guaranteed Work
Courteous Efficient Service
Selby Chevrolet Co.
On Main Street Ashland Phone 4061
"By Our GOOD SERVICE You Will Know U
SUBURBAN HEIGHTS
AlfrWrX Wf MB MEE1W4 fSOKE OP At TrtE USl'ftl TlMt Trif
MfMBtft KCRE HOURS LftTi lYlNi MtW, UMH 1mE JASiftR. Ifi
Wcma, a lArKR. io wraje a fcUntD-cor pub in k vktiduls
tiiuhft nw o.Kky mini HATS tKCri TriliR P1ACES, AS? IT 1iX)K
AAft TOR 1ilf t) SCSf ftlCM CUT AND WP TriCiR 0vW oum
bloodied," the Englishman re
plied. "You'll have to learn the
hard way."
Even Prime Minister Winston
Churchill opposed the Americans
daylight, pinpoint. precision
bombing program. The American
airmen would not be talked out
of their confidence in the great
four-motored Flying Forts. Those
planes now becoming obsolete
were designed for day bomb
ing and that is what they did fly
ing high and dropping their
bombs with astonishing accur
acy. : ,
Spaatz' bombers rarely at
tacked cities. They were assign
ed specific plants a refinery, a
still works or plants turning out
parts for planes and submarines.
In the light of day with their
planes clearly visible the young
sters who manned these ships
took them into box barrages of
flak which literally darkened the
sky with their puff balls of black
smoke. With the precision bomrj-
sight developed to obtain accur
acy at a heigh! of three or four
miles, the Forts cut Germany's
battle power down by destroying
the plants which supported her
armies RAF by night, USSTAF
by day. It was discouraging to
the enemy.
Nazis Went Underground
But Spaatz and many other
top officers here know that the
Germans showed us a thing or
two in the way of opposing or
avoiding bomb attacks on indus
try. American ond British fliers
broke the back of the Luftwaffe.
But the Germans dispersed their
plants. Some of them went un
derground. Some went into the
woods. Some operations were
carried on in thousands of pri
vate homes. If victory had de
pended on putting & permanent
stop to thevmanufacture of Ger
man airplanes, the Allies prob
ably would have lust the war.
The alternative was to wreck
Germany's industrial plants so
that sne could not wage war.
Best btt was to smash her oil re
fining facilities.
That is what USSTAF actually
accumplished. More than 11,000
USSTaF planes were thrown at
a single oil target over a period
of months. That was the Merse-
burg-Leuna Synthetic Oil Plant.
In the language of a fascinated
G. I. who surveyed the damage:
"They busted it all to hell."
Woman Acquitted
Of Slaying Cruel,
Brutal Husband
Ha.. June 26. (U.R)
Mrs. Thelma Stonebraker, 31,
today had been acquitted of the
murder ol her 52 year-old hus
band, George Stonebraker.
The slight-built, attractive
KptinoiiA wnn Hip nnmiitt&l from
an all male iury in district court
here Saturday night.
Mrs. stonebraKer was accusea
of firing two shots into her hus
hnnri while he leDt in a. chair in
the living room of their ranch
home Inst April 2.
Tha Hofon hnilt ' lie rase
around assertions that Ms.
Stonebraker feared her nusbana
because he was a "cruel and bru
tal man."
-,.... oma M, Hnnriav Inn latS
,n i-i.Hii, A 'AH Saturday afternoon
Please remember
ZERO CLUB
Out of bounds, civilians only
Delicious chicken end steak
dinners 7:00 p. m. to 3:00
a. m except Sunday. Phone
day time 5300; night 9101.
Br CLUYAS WILLIAMS
Nobel Prize Winner 1
AdmitsPro-German
Sympathy In Trial
Oslo, June 28. (U.R) Knut
Hamsun, 85-year-old Nobel prize
winning novelist, admitted pro
Nazi sympathies today when he
appeared for preliminary hear
ing on charges of collaborating
with the. Germans.
The court at Grimstad in south
Norway ordered Hamsun held
ROGUE RIVER LODGE
. Delicious Dinners
Cocktail Lounge Dancing
Open P.very Night
Except Mondays
Phone Trail' 1404
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HfJ THIS HOUSEjwRlST VVATCMVE ARS AND wOULD hrV'JV VwTON G?TVCU KNOVV.
for trial Sept. 22. He appeared to
be. ill and almost deaf. Ques
tions to him had to be repeated
many times. ;
. Hamsun told the court that
"many good people" belonged to
the Fascist Nasjonal Samling
party, and admitted he had Nazi j
leanings long before the invasion
of Norway.
Under questioning he said he
would not deny connections with
the Germans, "as I know many
others are trying to do." j
Chalker's Motel & Lodge
OFFICERS' CLUB
Dine-Dance-Refreshmenrs
Chicken and Steak Dinners
Most Unique Place in So. Ore.
CLOSED MONDAYS
Thursdays Private Parties Only
For reservations Ph Gold Bill 474
A9SS.
ftyM rue.
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DO YOU
Keep your car in the fight by keeping it in
fighting shape.
ROGUE RIVER CHEVROLET
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
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32 Period of time
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40 Halll
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service
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it will r e q u i re
several years pro
duction to replace
all the cars worn
out or scrapped
during the war. ,
ANSWER TO
fBEVIUUS PUZZLI
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7 Annoyed
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OF OUR FLEET MOVEMENT,
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