Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, July 10, 1947, Image 8

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    S outhern Oregon News Review. Thursday, Ju ly 10. 1947
Practical Instructions
For the Home Nurse
CED Scans Reasons for Failures
HO M E
Impartial Groups Attempt
Study of Business Flaws
By BAVKHAGE
X t u i Analyst and Commentator.
WASHINGTON.—The favorite g am e in W ashington to­
day is a new version of “ button, button, who’s got the bu tto n .”
Only for “ button” read: D epression, recession, shake-
down. read ju stm en t or w hat have you—if you have anything.
Sen. Robert Taft, as chairman of congress1 joint committee on the eco­
nomic report, had a questionnaire sent out to a long list of business men
The gist of the report seemed to be that there was going to be a business
recession, but it was going to be in the other fellow's business.
Frequently it is too much faith in ^ ----------------------------------------------------
the other fellow's failings and too financing, taxes and competitive
opportunity. There are very definite
little regard for
ways in which the business man
ones own that
might be helped in solving these
causes business
problems, particularly the problem
failures This is
of management. The CED report
e s p e c ia lly true
mentions these: Through advice and
of s m a ll b u s i­
counsel from his suppliers: through
nesses Locating
guidance available from the large
some of these
trade associations: by means of pro­
" f a i l u r e s ” and
grams instituted by his own com­
preventing th e m
munity. thsough special services
was the job re­
which could be provided by estab­
cently undertak
lished counselling and market re­
en and reported
search agencies within the means
on by the Com­
of the small enterprise: more ex­
mittee for Eco­
tended research supported by busi­
nomic
Develop­
ness men and foundations; special
ment, a non-gov­
Baukhage
courses in universities, colleges and
e rn m e n t, n o n ­
partisan group which makes studies secondary schools, and expansion
of the present services offered free
of this nature.
Just as this organization was by the department of commerce.
completing its work, another some­ These are graphically illustrated in
what sim ilar group was setting a the diagram.
task for itself in the hope of
straightening out some of the other M e e tin g N eeds
kinks in the business world This O f Business
was the National Planning associa
But the greatest problem is how
tion, which is out to discover how to place before the highly-individ-
the many firms which steadfastly ualistic. hard-to-get-at small busi­
year-in and year-out maintain good ness man the facts, both as to his
relations with their employees do the needs and how to satisfy them.
trick. Both propositions are highly That is up to the individuals in
interesting.
each community who w ill take
enough interest to read the report
C E D Furnishes
(available without charge from the
Committee for Economic Develop­
F a it R eports
The Committee for-Economic De­ ment, 285 Madison avenue. New
velopment has for its chairman York City) and bring it to the atten­
Paul Hoffman who in private life, tion of the local business men's
is president of Studebaker corpora­ clubs, chambers of commerce and
tion. Directing its research and pol­ , sim ilar groups
The other proposition which
icy division is Raymond Rubicam,
is in the making, and which
the well-known advertising man.
This organization is highly re­
spected. It has a staff of top-
notchers doing the research,
and its members lean over
backwards to be non-partisan.
In fact, at a news conference
called here to discuss the re­
port’s findings, one reporter be­
came pretty riled because he
couldn't get Hoffman to com­
ment on the tax situation, one
of the hot-spot political issues
of the moment.
likewise has a purely objective
aim, is being carried on by the
National Planning association,
which is also a non-political,
non - profit organization. The
NPA states as its purpose:
“ Planning by Americans in
agriculture, business, labor and
government.”
Its study, which w ill probably
take a year, is entitled “ The Causes
of Industrial Peace under Collective
Bargaining.” .
The project is under direction of
There are two reasons why CED’s
latest report (on small business) is j two special committees composed
/
SPECIAL COURSES
A N D RESEARCH
fe y
B
p
Ê
f e
rrm
IW
« I" -------
IN
SCHOOLS AND
COLLEGES
GREATER
AVAILABILITY
OF RESEARCH
FINDINGS
U S D-pt of Comm«««
:::
:::
I *. * aaaaaa * •’
CLEARING HOUSE
FOR GOVERNMENT
SERVICES AND
INFORMATION
Chart illustrates how comprehensive CED program will aid in
solving problems of small businesses.
significant. One: Like all CED re- ! of both NPA members and non­
ports, it represents the cooperative members. One is a sponsorship
efforts of top men in the highly committee composed of 40 business
practical field of business and top and labor leaders. The other is the
men in the field of science—political research committee made up of 26
economy;
a cooperative effort experts in the field.
The idea was explained to a
whose sole purpose is to make
America a better place in which to group of us by Clinton Golden, who
live. There are no axes to grind.
w ill direct the research.
The second reason the report is
Golden explained that what his
important to all of us is that today committee was after was a differ­
more than ever, in a world of com­ ent approach to the question of
peting ideologies, the perpetuation labor-management relations.
of our democracy, our system, de­
pends upon the fostering of small
business.
Although small business needs
assistance, that assistance is d iffi­
cult to proffer, because small busi­
ness isn’t an “ it” —it is three and a
half m illion small business men, all
highly individualistic; all as inde­
NEW YORK.—The Far West sec-*
pendent and hard to influence as a tion of the United States has grown
monkey at the top of a cocoanut greatly in recent years In popula­
palm. And these disunited, sink-or- tion, income, industrial stature and
swim, cock-of-the-walkers make up international importance, accord­
98 per cent of the firms operating in ing to a study in the Index, a quar­
this country today.
terly publication of the New York
As the CED report puts it :
Trust company, just published.
“ Small business Is more v ir­
"W orld War II,” the study gays,
ile and more durable than
"telescoped into a few years an in­
might be deduced from the hue
dustrial expansion in the Far West
and cry heard for many years
which might have taken several
as to the disadvantages under
decades to accomplish even at the
which it labors. Nonetheless,
relatively fast rate of development
small businesses are confronted
some parts of the area had been
with special problems and diffi­
enjoying.”
culties that are very real. It is
The war, it is pointed out,
vital to all business and to all
citizens that conditions unfavor­
brought new factories and facilities
able to small business be rem­ i to the region, accelerated develop­
ment of its raw materials, expand­
edied wherever possible."
The report finds that the prob­ ed its power supply and Increased
lems of the small business man fall its population, thereby adding both
Into four categories: management, I to its market potential and 'its labor
UNUSUAL GRADUATION TR IO . . . Three members of the Sevln
family received degrees at graduation exercises at the I.os Angeles
campus of University of California. Mrs. Sonya Sevln (center), a
49-year-old grandmother, completed her college course In five years.
Shown with her are her daughter. Lois, 21. and her married son,
Marshall, 23, also graduates.
NEWS REVIEW
Labor Act Is Effective;
Weather Hits Corn Crop
Verging on m en tal and political exhaustion a fte r a bit­
ter, two-day fight, w eary sen ato rs voted 68 to 25 to overrid e
P resid en t T ru m a n ’s veto of the T aft-H artley labor bill,
The action, sustaining a w a Hop-*®'
ing 331 to 83 house vote to pass the age crops and possibly buckwheat
bill over the veto, came on the if seed is available.
On upland farms, ponds and lakes
heels of a final presidential plea to
Sen. Alben Barkley (Dcm.. Ky.) to overflowing their boundaries also
muster all possible forces in the w ill cut seriously into corn yields.
senate “ to prevent this b ill from All in all, a bumper corn crop is
considered extremely unlikely, even
becoming law.”
Opponents of the measure needed with a favorable growing season up
32 votes to uphold the veto, and to October.
Some authorities have begun to
they waged a desperate, last-ditch
battle to attain their objective. believe that the government's grain
Final result, however, was a smash­ export program should be re-exam­
ing defeat for Mr. Truman at the ined in view of conditions existing
hands of the Republican-controlled on the nation's farms at present.
congress.
IKE RESIGNS:
Highlights of a tooth-and-tongue
opposition fight to delay the senate Coes Academ ic
vote as long as possible in order to
General of the Arm y Dwight D.
gain support was an all-night ses- •Eisenhower has resigned as army
chief of staff to accept the presi­
dency of Columbia university in
New York, effective early next
PROTEST STRIKES
year.
With the Taft-Hartley act in
His decision to step out as top
force only a few hours, scat­
man in the nation's m ilita ry hier­
tered protest strikes suddenly
archy to take the
blossomed into a full-scale walk­
academic p o s t
out of 180,000 soft coal miners.
was
announced
At least 41 mines were closed
in a statement
in 10 states. The walkout ap­
by
Maj
Gen.
peared to be a spontaneous re­
Floyd L. Parks,
action on the part of the min­
chief of the war
ers to the new labor law.
d e p a r t m e n t 's
public
relations
d 1 v i s i on. The
sion during which Sen. Glen H Tay­
statement g a Id
lor <Dem , Idaho) held the floor for
that Eisenhower
eight hours and 20 minutes and Sen.
accepted the Co­
Eisenhower
Wayne Morse (Rep., Ore.) talked
lumbia presiden­
for 10 hours and two minutes It
was the longest filibuster in mod­ cy with the approval of the Presi­
dent and the secretary of war. His
ern congressional history.
resignation w ill become effective
The Taft-Hartley act, which con­ "a t such time as his superiors may
stitutes a wholesale revision of the release him from active duty in the
Wagner act of 1934, was termed by arm y.”
President Truman in his veto mes­
The man who mapped the strat­
sage a "shocking piece of legisla­ egy which brought victory to Allied
tion.” He asserted that the measure forces in Europe in World War II
would “ cause more strikes, not w ill retain his rank as a five-star
fewer,” and would put the country general for life and continue to re­
a long step on the dangerous road ceive a compensation of about
toward "a totally managed econ­ $15,000 a year.
omy.”
In itia l speculation on a successor
“ This legislation would encourage to General Eisenhower as chief of
distrust, suspicion and arbitrary staff centered on
attnudes,” the President told con­ G ert. O m a r N
gress.
Bradley, now Vet
erans’ administra
FLOODED OUT:
tion c h i e f , who
commanded
th e
/Vo Humper Crop
a rm y
g ro u n d
Experts who recently predicted a forces in Europe
three billion bushel com crop this d u r i n g the war
year were hastily revising their es­ Other high-ranking
timates in the light of continuing generals under con­
torrential rains and widespread sideration for the
Bradley
floods which have transformed position were Gen.
much of the Midwest into a soggy Jacob L. Devers, arm y ground
mass of mud.
forces chief, and Lt. Gen. J. Lawton
Damage has been particularly Collins, chief of army public infor­
heavy in Iowa, extending from one mation.
end of the state to the other. Flood­
As president of Columbia, Eisen­
ing of river bottom lands is only hower w ill be the successor to
part of the loss.
Nicholas M urray Butler who retired
Thousands of acres of crops have in 1945 and is now Columbia's
been washed out, and the loss is president emeritus. The general
considered irreparable. It is too late has also been elected a member of
to replant with anything except for- the university’s board of trustees.
RAPID GROWTH
Industry Expands in Far West
supply. With its vast store of natu­
ral resources and its rapidly in­
creasing population, the Far West
looks forward to a continuing post­
war industrial growth through de­
velopment of new products and new
markets.”
The seven states included In
the study are Arizona, California,
Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah .and
Washington.
"The Far West,” according to the
article, “ made the largest relative
gains in population and income of
all the areas of the United States
during World War II, and has
grown faster than the nation as a
whole since 1939, increasing its
population by 31 per cent as com­
pared with a 7 per cent increase for
the entire United States. Factory
jobs in the Far West in the same
period rose 68 per cent as com-
pared with 46 per cent for the na­
tion. In food production, the in­
crease in the Far West amounted to
25 per cent as compared with 23 per
cent for the United States as a
whole.
“ Continued expansion of industry
appears to be of prim ary im por­
tance to the progress of the Far
West,” the article concludes. "Its
abundant natural resources, its c li­
mate, its forest riches, its excellent
harbors and its scenic beauties
have been the chief contributing
factors to its rapid growth in the
past. To accommodate and support
a population increase in the future
comparable to that enjoyed so far
in this century and particularly In
the World War II period, would
seem to require the broader econ­
omy which its sustained industrial
growth is furnishing.”
\I/H A T E V E R happens, one way
* * or another, the ring party of
the year w ill tuke pluce in Chicago,
with Tony Zale and Rocky Graziuno
at the head of the receiving line
These two gave the big party of
19-16, last summer In New York
They turned In one
of the greatest ring
shows of all time,
and you can turn
the clock buck to
Abel and Cain or
David and Goliath.
Few
appreciate
the n u m b e r of
great fighters who
have fig u r e d in
past middleweight
championships The
list Is one of the
K. Graziano
most brilliu n t in
boxing history. It Includes Jack
Dempsey, the nonpareil, from 1883
to 1895 After that we find such
names as Bob Fitzsimmons. Tom­
my Ryan. Kid McCoy. Philadelphia
Jack O'Brien. Stanley Ketchel,
B illy Papke. Frank Klaus. Harry
Greb, Tiger Flowers and Mickey
Walker.
* - s
N U R S IN G
Giving First Aid
CCIDENTS a re bound to hap­
A
pen in any household. He pre­
pared! It'» a ra re sum m er day
th at a t least one of the children
doesn't come home with a wound
of some kind.
D o y o u k n o w h ow to t-li-atiae a e c r a p e d
k n e e l I t e in o v e d ir t nr o th e r o b j e c t s fr o m
un e y e ) S t o p u no u b le e d ? S e n d fo r o u r
W e e k ly
N ew sp ap er
S e r v ic e
b o o k le t
No
BI.
It t e lls b o w to m e e t e m e r g e n c i e s , n u r s e
a b e d p a t ie n t, c a r e fo r th e n e w b a b y ,
and m ore
S e n d 25c I c o in I fo r "P rac­
t ic a l ln « t r u r llo n lo r th e llu n ie N u r s e ’*
Io W e ek ly N e w s p a p e r S e r v ic e , Z43 t t r d
D l h S I.. N e w Y o rk I I, N . Y . P r in t n a m e ,
a d d r e s s , b o o k le t tit le a n d N o . BI
She's Ahead
Here you find many of the three-
Ruth— F.trry tim e K jllir r im r u r r / i a
starred names of ring history.
These men have written chapters new fellow she ilairni that the next Jay
that never will be forgotten by ' it her birthJay.
John— C om pletely ignoring the bast*
those who follow the leather throw­
Ruth — Y et, thinking only ol the
ers. Dempsey — Fitzsimmons — j present.
McCoy — Ketchel — Greb — Walk­
er; slip us six greater names from
Ilr'tla Dunit
the roped-ln sector of sport.
Forem an—-Now, then, hurry up.
No one can yet class Zale or
Graziano with the six leuders we
have named. We doubt that either
belongs with these sjx masters, al­
though Dempsey is well beyond our
day and time. But the old-timers of
other years hove told us he belongs
around the top. Certainly no one
can argue the worth of Fitzsim­
mons, McCoy, Ketchel, Greb and
Walker. They also could handle
heavyweights, especially R u b y
Robert, one of the great fighters of
all time, a boxer and terrific
puncher with middleweight legs
and a heavyweight body, still a
great fighter at the age of 45.
I lest Since II alker
We doubt very much that Zale or
Graziano would have any great
amount of luck against those men­
tioned abuwe. But the two, Zale and
Graziano, are a big improvement
over those who have come along
since the Toy Bulldog, meaning
Mickey Walker, traded his boxing
gloves for an 'artist's brush.
Zale and Graziano proved this
part of the argument in a meeting
that had even more action than the
stars of the past ever turned in.
Melodrama may not mean skill or
class. But It happens to be some­
thing the public likes Io see, when
■ it Is ably handled.
In 1939, the middleweight stew
included a weird mixture under
the names of Solly Kreiger, A1 Hos-
tak and Ceferino Garcia. They were
merely flllers-in.
In 1940, Zale arrived as the
NBA crown holder. Tony has been
wearing the middleweight crown
ever since, including a long war
lapse from 1941 up through 1945.
W orker—All right, boss, but
Rome w asn't built in a day.
Forem an—Maybe not, but I
w asn't forem un on that job!
Short Rom ance—He thought she
was devastating, lint he found she
was only so to his bank roll.
Quirk Iteflex
An inquisitive tourist come
upon a m an driving a team of
m ules. "H as a m ule ever kicked
you?" he asked.
“ No," draw led the other, “ but
som etim es he kicks the place
where I recently w as."
Yodora
checks
perspiration
odor
vt/ct
THE
Made with a Jure cream base Yixlnra
is actually toothing to normal skins.
N o harsh chemicals or irrita tin g
salts. Won't harm skin or clothing.
Stays soft ami erramy, never gets
grainy.
Try gentle Yodora—/r r l the wonderful
difference!
While Zale was in war service a
young, hard punching roughneck by
the name of Graziano came along
like a Midwestern tornado. Grazi­
ano was blessed with one greal ring
asset. He could punch. He was
never any too smart and he was
never much of a boxer. He was
never particular about observing
any rules, as he proved in his meet­
ing with M arty Servo, whom he
fouled and almost wrecked.
In a way Graziano was something
a softened-up ring needed He was
rough, tough, a braggart, but after
all a fighter and a puncher. He was
also a crowd plcaser, and a valu­
able entry at the gate.
Rocky had built up a bigger part
of his reputation at wrecking oppo­
nents who were badly outweighed.
He wasn’t so hot when it came to
a matter of pound for pound.
Tony Can Take It
In his meeting with Zale the chal­
lenger did about everything, except
remove Zale’s headpiece. When I
saw Rocky nail Zale with a full
right to the jaw, saw Tony go
through the bottom rope, appar­
ently bleeding at every open pore
around the head in one of the early
rounds, the fight seemed to be over.
But Zale got up and kept coming
on. The defending champion con­
tinued to take a terrific beating.
His eyes seemed glazed and his
knees were wobbling. Here was
about as game an exhibition as any­
one ever had seen in the ring.
Zale was dazed and dizzy. He had
taken the heaviest artillery Grazi­
ano could throw. And then sud­
denly, after a body attack. It was
Graziano who crumpled to the floor
and took the count.
This closed out one of the most
dramatic meetings the ring ever
has seen, looking back to the days
of Jem Mace or John Lawrence
Sullivan.
Zale, a first-class boxer, sur­
prised one by Inability to keep his
chin and features away from
Rocky's right hand. But Zale sur­
prised one even more by his un­
believable ability to soak up all this
punishment and still have enough
left for a body knockout.
GIRLS! WOMEN!
try this if you’re
NERVOUS
On CERTAIN DAYS* 0« M o n th -
D o f e m a le f u n c t io n a l m o n t h ly d is t u r b ­
a n c e s m a k e y o u fe e l n e r v o u s . Irr ita b le ,
s o w e a k a n d tir e d o u t — a t s u c h tim e s ?
T h e n d o tr y L y d ia E. P ln k h n m 's V e g e ­
ta b le C o m p o u n d t o r e lie v e s u c h s y m p ­
to m s . I t's j a m o u s fo r th la l T a k e n r e g u ­
la r ly — P ln k h a m 'a C o m p o u n d h e lp s
b u ild u p r e s is t a n c e a g a in s t s u c h d is ­
tr e ss . A lso a g r e a t s t o m a c h ic t o n ic I
mu[.nKKMitrs
WNU—13
C0MP0UM
28—47
Watch Your
Kidneys/
Help Them Clennaei th e Blood
o f lln rm fu l Body W aste
Your kidneys are constantly Altering
waste matter from the blood stream. But
kidneys sometimes lag in their work— do
not set as Nature Intended—fall to re­
move Impurities that. If retained, may
olson the system and upset the whole
ody machinery.
Symptoms may be nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks nt dizziness,
getting up nights, awelling, puffiness
under the eyes— a feell » of nervous
anzlety and Inaa of pep • id strength.
Other signs of kidney or bladder dis­
order are sometimes burning, scanty or
too frequent urination.
There should he no doubt that prompt
treatment Is wiser then neglect. Use
Doan’s Pills. Doan's have been winning
new friends for mors than forty years.
They have a nation-wide reputation.
Are recommended by grateful people the
country over. Ask your mighbnrl
C
D oan spills