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NOGALES INTERNATIONAL-Nogales’ Home Newspaper— NOGALES, ARIZ., SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1941 flogales International A Democratic Newspaper Devoted to the Interest of Nogales and Vicinity PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING In The NOGALES INTERNATIONAL Building 225 Grand Ave. f Nogales Arizona CRAIG POTTINGER Editor and Publisher j Subscription Rate $230 A Year, $l3O Six Months, 25 cents a Month Entered as Second class matter February 3, 1928 at the postoffice at Nogales, Arizona, under the Act of March 3,187 S OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF SANTA CRUZ COUNTY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF CITY OF NOGALES OUR CIVIC PLATFORM I—A GOOD HIGHWAY FROM NOGALES TO MEXICO CITY. *—MORE HOUSES AND APARTMENTS. 4—A PAVED HIGHWAY FROM NOGALES TO BISBEE. President Knows What He Intends To Do And Will Do It At Proper Time COME of the newspaper columnists have reverted to reading the President’s mind and now suggest i that he is undecided what course he intends to pur- j sue in relation to the convoy question. Having no more definite information on that sub- j ject than the President has disclosed in his regular' press conferences, we are still willing to venture that j this praticular example of telepathy is. wrong. \ We think that the President knows perfectly well what he intends to do, and will do it at the proper time. That, we know, ,is the way his mind works. As to the particular course he contemplates, our guess would be little if any better than that of the next newspaper man. We are aware, of course, that he has stated that the war supplies now in transit or due to be shipped will reach their destination. This implies a definite! program. Probably the reason he has not disclosed I this program is that he follows the Navy regulations, j which discourage the publication of movements of | our ships. We assume that this was the reason that the scout patrol service on which the Navy is engag ed was not a matter of general knowledge until Sen ator Tobey declared that the President was already having the shipments to the anti-Nazi countries con voyed by the Navy. j The Senator undertook to bring the evidence of Ihts before the Senate but it came down to a mere; recital of certain letters he had received, the writers of which he did not disclose. Thereupon the Presi dent and Secretary of Navy announced that there was no American convoy but instead there was con tinuing of the patrol of the sea lanes fti order that the presence of aggressive submarines or other craft might be reported. It was revealed that such infor mation was transmitted in plain English—which the British or anybody else could pick out of the air. Shooting Does Not Always Mean War The President was asked at one of his conferences 1 what course an American naval officer would pursue j in the event his vessel sighted a submarine bent on | destroying one of the merchant ships, to which he j replied that the American commander would report j to him. It has been asserted by the isolationists and those others who decry the principle of all aid to Britain “short of war” that if we undertook the convoying of the anti-Axis supply ships, it was practically in evitable that a naval engagement would result and that would mean war. Our own history shows that this hypothetical sequence of events does not in volve war necessarily. As Senator Guffey of Penn sylvania pointed out the other day, there have been numerous instances of gun fire both on sea and on land that did not result in war between the nations engaged l . The second President of the United States. John Adams, called Congress together in special session and asked for military and naval rearmament be cause the French had seized American ships carry ing goods to English ports and had sunk British ships in American waters. President Adams called atten tion to “actual hostilities against American com-! merce by French cruisers.” There were quite a num ber of engagements involving our vessels and the French navy. In fact, there was one big fight when our “Constellation” defeated and captured their “L’lnsurgente.” Yet, neither France nor the United States declared war. Those 26 Freighters At Suez? Two weeks ago the newspapers carried big head lines on a report from Vichy, France, that “diploma tic informants said tonight that 26 American mer chant ships with war material for the British Middle East armies, accompanied by American warships, had reached the Suez Canal.” Just a few days earlier President Roosevelt announced that the Red Sea and Ihc Gulf of Aden, previously named as a combat zone, was open to American shipping. This was done by rescinding a year-old proclamation, which includ ed these waters in the banned zones. Our naval au thorities here, when asked about the report, mere ly replied that “no United States Navy ships are em ployed in the convoying business,” and our diplomats in Vichy said that they could not confirm the story of the arrival of the merchant ships in Egypt. We do know that freighters have cleared from American ports with supplies intended for aid to In The WEEKS NEWS l g ’lgy a M faPf l WnC FROM HER TREAS- I URY" Mi 1 dr• d | Schwarts of Brook- 1 lyn. transfers funds fl to Uncle Sam to buy a United States De fense Bond. { ja,4SKI k w ’Wlr&Ea llpt THEATER TELEVISION for an audience of one million Is I planned by Radio Corporation of America. Tom PrendergasL n coffee at elbow, checks on control board before N. Y. [■ premiere at New York Theater. »• ■— j l7 Red Cross Brightens Lives In Orient A stark story of need and the almost pitiful grati “ tude for any relief that can be granted is told in a file of letters sent recently by Wilber Judd, asso- j ciate director of Red Cross work in China, to nation al headquarters. Judd’s letters, copies of communications from hos-1 pit-alg, missions and feeding stations throughout the stricken land, were requests for allotments of crack- j ed wheat and rice, drugs, medical supplies and Junior Red Cross Christmas brxrs. From Hinghwa in the once prosperous province of Kiangsu came the story: “In our city there are about 3500 families absolutely dependent on relief, with an average of three mouths per family. Condi i tions are growing worse.” On behalf of the Catholic institutions in the hard- 1 hit Shanghai area came a plea for aid for 2300 or phans. Particularly wanted were “a good number of Junior Red Cross baxes.” From Sungkiang, a little village that was square ly in the line of Japanese attack during late 1937, came a letter: “Thank you for noting our desire for some 10 or 20 Christmas boxes for our orphans. They will surely be delighted. Do you indicate in your letter that it will be impossible to get an extra 10 or 20 bags of wheat for them. It sure would do them a lot of good.” From Huchow, Chekiang: “The wheat has arrived and only one objection has been heard —that there is so little of it. But we are living in hopes of more lat er on! We have 420 children in our child welfare project, which means that we are teaching these | children and giving them one meal per day. We would like enough Junior Red Cross boxes to give out |to them. Do we not know the contents, so do not j know if they can be divided or not.” From Hofei in Anhwei province, suffering from both war and flood disaster, came the report that “thousands” of children in that region art' in need of help: Greece and Jugoslavia. Despite the fall of those two countries, these shipments were not cancelled and it was suggested that these ships, when advised that rto Hitler forces had swamped these countries, changed their course and had gone around the Cap' 1 j of Good Hope into the Red Sea and delivered their I cargoes there. If this surmise is correct, it is evident ! that despite some discouraging reports, a lot of the material, guns, airships, etc., are getting to where i they will do the most good. It boars out the Presi ■ dent’s insistence on the delivery of the planes, guns and other combat material, in the production of j which our factories are now bending every effort. Incidentally, it indicates that the President has a very clear idea of what has to be done to compass the | Hitler projected' world domination. What that program is we do not know. to* Ur jfi | MmA Ip] FIVE BROTHERS INDUCTED lij into the Army at Peoria. 1111- B*l nois, U a record. New sol jen diets are the brothers Hark less John, Weldon, Owen. HW Leonard and James. - s ipih ii yi 11 HHlibii k, < I WmSm T Tiiim ' ' wmm flk' ( m K\ W 4 J |1 m AFTER TWO YEARS IN ANTARCTIC. I Dr. Russell Frazier ol Salt Lake City, a 1 member ol the Byrd Expedition, lust re- I turned, shows his wife and son. Bus- I soil Jr., his Eskimo sled dogs. Kilo: vv _M|. : P 4 AN EARLY MORNING CALLER on a Long Island home was this freight car, which broke through a bumper on I siding 20 lest away. I The'four occupants oi the I house escaped with only I slight Injuries. I VACATION HORIZONS. Four youngsters from New I York's crowded streets get a preview ol vacation I pleasures aboard a big Hudson River Day Line I steamer. Thousands of vacationers annually travel on I these boats between New York and Albany. caUing at West Point and playgrounds along the Hudson. Seen Heard THE MAIN DRAG Car parked at a wrong angle om Grand avenue. Tom. Heady buying drinks (soft ones) for members of the county draft board. Picture of Bird Yoas, “The Sage of the Santa Ritas,” in window of Wilde’s store. It was drawn by Artist Sol Kogen of Chicago, visit ing in Nogales. TAKE THE WORLD WITH YOU! Wherever you go, the new 1942 models, with un heard of power, tone and selectivity will bring the world to you. ONLY PHILCO HAS IT! Combination Home ra dios, that are conveniently portable and ruggedly built to .stand the gaff! Europe, Asia, South Ame rica, Day and Night. YES ITS PHILCO AGAIN! ; . R. C. EDGELL COMPANY 206 GRAND AVE. IS Weather Conditions Favorable For Growing Crops j PHOENIX. May 16—Weather con ditions during the month of April were generally favorable for grow ing crops in all parts of the State. While precipitation for the month exceeded normal it fell during short, definite periods, providing as a whole good opportunity for field work. ( Pasture and range feeds thrived with abundant supplies of soil ! moisture but growth in northern 1 and eastern parts of the State was retarded around the middle of the month by a cold spell, which caus jed some frost damage to peach i crops and small grains in higher elevations. | For the first time in many years, ' farmers in Maricopa and Pinal Counties have been able to plan | their operations for the coming sea ! son without fear of a shortage of ir rigation water. With farm product | prices increasing, the prospects for 1 the coming season are very favor able for Arizona agriculture. Indicated by the May 1 condition, the 1941 Arizona wheat crop will be 651,000 bushels as compared with 819,000 bushels a year ago. The sharp reduction in estimated pro duction is due to a much smaller acreage of wheat planted for this season. Acreage estimate for har vest in 1941 is 30,000 acres, a reduc tion of 8,000 from the area harvest ed last year. Infestation of rust has appeared in a number of fields in Maricopa and Yuma Counties, and is expected to cause damage as it did last year. Winter wheat production for the United States is estimated to be 653,105,000 bushels as compared with 589,151,000 bushels harvested last year. Although indicated yield per acre is approximately the same as a year ago, abandonment during the past winter has been much lighter than in recent years. Heavy April rains in the great plains states reduced prospective aban donment in most of the areas. Win ter wheat production in most moun- LEGAL NOTICES! LEGAL NOTICES! , ■ i | Official Proceedings (Continued from Page Five) I Salary Fund and a further sum of $4,724.63 from the General Fund to the Expense Fund. There being no further business to come before the Board at this time they recessed to meet on Apr. 11th, 1941. L. ESCALADA, Chairman ATTEST: WM. G. SII\?GNTON, j Clerk Office of the Board of Supervisors ! Nogales, Arizona April 11th, 1941 j The Board met pursuant to recessed meeting of April 7th, 1941. ! Present Louis Escalada, Chairman, R. T. Frazier, Jr., member. Wm. G. ' Simonton, Clerk. A. B. Sorrells absent. • Upon motion of (R. T. Frazier, Jr., seconded by Louis Escalada and | carried, the Liquor License No. 1433 was approved. The application was ! made by George F. Gerrard. There being no further business to come before the Board at this I time they adjourned to meet on May sth, 1941. L. ESCALADA, ; Chairman ATTEST: WM. G. SIMONTON, Clerk | Attention, Visitors To Mexico! ! i See us for FREE TRAVEL INFORMATION. We specialize in all services needed by businessmen, tourists and sportsmen going into Mexico. Auto Insurance, Money Exchange (pay- ! | I ing the best rates in town), facilities for obtaining Tourist Cards, Auto Permits, Business Passports, and complete ar rangements for Hunting and Fishing Trips. BANCO DEL PACIFICO, S. A. TOURIST DEPARTMENT 110 Grand Avenue Phone 95 Nogales, Arizona j r iinTwri ON GOING AHEAD JUST as the railroads turned to the new streamlined, high speed trains to afford travelers the utmost in ser vice so must a bank recognize its responsibility to its depositors and patrons by making available a financial service which meets all of the requirements of the day. This institution offers its customers every phase of banking service that is consistent with sound business dealing. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF NOGALES Nogales, Arizona Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation PAGE SIX Record In Ouster Hearing To Be Filed By May 21 i PHOENIX, May 16 (U.P.) A i record of Gov. Sidney P Osborn’s j ouster hearing against members of j the Arizona Industrial commission j today was scheduled to be sub mitted to the stfite supreme court ! by May 21. L. C. Holmes and Lynn Lock hart, commissioners, were charged with “misfeasance, nonfeasance and malfeasance in office” and were ordered removed by the gov ernor. The two commissioners, however, appealed to the high court and received a writ of cer tiorari for a review of the hearing. A transcript of the proceedings originally was scheduled to be sub mitted to the supreme court May 14, but the governor was granted additional time when he disclosed a record of the hearing had not been completed. I | McKinney Lands Post In Tucson TUCSON, May 16 (U.P.)— Dan C. McKinney, former chairman of the Democratic State Central Com mittee, today held an appoint ment as registrar of contractors for the Tucson area. McKinney, southern Arizona cat tle rancher, managed Gov. Sidney P. Osbron’s successful guberna torial campaign. He will move to Tucson to administer his new du ties. —: 4 tain and western states is expected to exceed last year’s crops. Prospects for the 1941 Arizona hajf crops are much better than usual. Condition was 97 percent, as com pared with only 79 percent a year ago and the average condition of 88 percent. Abundant rains pro duced heavy first cuttings of hay and also put farm pastures in ex cellent condition.