FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TKIBUITB
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Dally Eicept Saturday
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ARTHUR PERRY. Sunday Editor
MRS OLIVE STARCIIER. SoC Editor
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Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
Christmas was a dreary day
for Germany and the Germans.
The self - styled 'master race'
found nothing In their stockings,
but Herr Hitler still in their
hair. A plea was made to save
them from a 'harsh peace', as
word came the V-bombs of the
Nazis were raining death and
ruin upon new non-combatant
areas,
Editors are still discussing at
great length and learnedly, the
whyfores and whereofs of the
'Cigarettes, the land hasn't got.
- a e
There Is some talk of steps to
'reform the legislature'. The best
way to reform the legislature is
not have any.
The year long demands of the
Older Girls for a 'white Christ
mas' were ignored by weather
sources, but already the fight
for one next year is underway.
Yesterday instead of throwing a
snowball at their grandson, and
hitting an Innocent bystander,
they basked in near-April sun
shine, and swatted stray flies
in the kitchen: The nearest they
could come to a 'white Christ
mas', was to feel sorry for the
Eskimos, and read it was 57 be
low in northern Minnesota.
e
TRY ANYTHING ONCE
(St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
"If any reader has been .
hunting far and wide for the
recipe for turlu gujev, we are
delighted to tell him, or her,
where it can be found. Furth
ermore, If it's the recipe for
mlsov spannak that is wanted,
or for mlsov cempoog, which
some people prefer, or for
haigagan kebab, or even for
Victory garden dolmas. that
information also Is available.
See page A4946 of the Con
gressional Record."
e
The C. Wig Ashpole boy,
Chuck, Is coming along fine with
his music. He sings and weilds
cornet.
Tokyo rreports their sub
. marines are again operating off
the Pacific coast. There should
not be confused with the Ger
man underwater boats, that were
teen off the const, of Florida, in
the early stage of the 1840 cam
paign, and scared New Deal
x moguls back to Washington, D.
THAT'S piFFERENTI
(Bend Bulletin)
"The latest from the ninth
service command publicity of
, . fice at Fort Douglas, Utah,
V Is a couple of pages on the
v virtues of chili con came.
There are recipes, too. We
are not acquainted with the
one, soldier, WAAC, or offi
cer, who is doing this Job but
our idea is that he would be
w better back in civil life or out
X where the fighting is going
on. If neither is to be done
let him (or her) read up on
paper saving."
e
New food rationing rules hit
the nation, whereby 85 per cent
of all meats will again be ra
tioned. It comes Just as the an
nual pig-sticking gets underway
in the rural regions, and steaks
in the original package, are clus
tered thick around haystacks.
Citizens have started making
, their New Year resolutions. The
main ones are as unbreakable
as the windshields of automo
biles were once supposed to be.
eve
Late December robins are
still on the Job hereabouts. "The
misery of sticking around here
all winter, Just for the honor of
being the first robin of spring.
la not worth it," reports J,
Cochran Robin.
The firing rate of the Army
Ordnance SO-caliber aircraft ma
chine gun has been Increased
from 650-700 to 950 rounds per
minute.
Cm Mall Tribune Want Ads,
AiMdar, Dm. . 1844
One Extreme to Another
Yes, how we Americans do love extremes!
Six months ago the war in Europe was "in the
bag," the end definitely and "officially" set for the
month of October.
Now the same source responsible for that claim,
can see no end to the war at all I
We quote:
"No responsible military authority here will hazard a
guess as to the end of this war, in Europe or against Japan.
It may be six months, or it may be six yearsl The experts
have been so confused and confounded by this unexpected
counter-offensive by the Germans that they are in a panic.
One can't pry a definite prediction as to the end of the war
from any one of them. They lust won't talk for publication.
Six months ago they wouldn't do anything elsel"
THAT sounds like Washington.
Washinnrtnn in war. wouldn't be Washington
if it were calm, deliberate
Tf oooma nnlv vpstprrlsiv
ina oTiH.aiVcrnff. trims to
inc nn Tf street, and scanning the heavens for a fleet
of Nazi Dlanes they were
Wmir thov am waminc
bombs crossing the Atlantic ocean almost any time I
SIX months ago orders went out from the national
eem'fnl fn Hi am an Hp. -certain war nlants the war
VCgS.IV. W vfc --"-w
urn a nrn rhVallv over ease
turn all bridegrooms to non
the Washington ranK ana me spent ineir weeK-enas
at the horse races near Baltimore, and on the golf
courses closer to home.
Wnm lim-so rapine ia ruled out. all over the land.
tnnA rati'nninor in damned
fore, all munition factories have been returned to a
94-hnnr Rhifr.. and armv nuotas have been boosted
from Tampa, Florida, to
AND no one really complains. The American peo
ple are willing to do anything that has to be done
to win this war and win it at the earliest possible
date.
But it does seem rather
upon Uncle Sam soaring
fidence one day, ana aown to me siougn 01 pessi
mism and despair the day after.
Yet that is youth our
. . .
our weaKness. Ana youtn, me Dounce ana Dounie
ousness of youth, is going to win this war in the end!
An Optimistic General
It will take more than any allied reverse in Europe
however to ever dim the ardent optimism of General
MacArthur.
If our lugubrious friends
thing to cheer them up, as
of the war is concerned let them go over to the War
Department and ask for the files of the General's
dispatches since he left Bataan for Australia, nearly
three years ago.
It was then the General
Well, the General did return. Now from his head
quarters in the Philippines comes official word that:
"The Leyte campaign Is over, and the Japanese under
General Tomoyukl Yamashlta have sustained perhaps the
greatest defeat in the annals of the Japanese army, with
nearly 180,000 casualties to less than 12,000 for the U. S. A.
Japan has also lost nearly 3000 planes in the past four weeks,
ten Jap convoys, with 27 warships and 41 transports have,
been sunk with approximately 30,000 Japanese troops
drowned."
The only fly in that ointment might be in noting
that nearly two months ago dispatches from General
MacArthur's headquarters claimed organized Jap re
sistance on Leyte had ceased, only a. mopping up pro
gram remained, and the Philippines would soon be
back in American hands forever! !
Wise After the Event .
None of the many U. S. war commentators has
been more concerned with POST-WAR problems
than the esteemed and highly remunerated Walter
Lippmann.
Even before the sweeping
the N. Y. Herald Tribune
up blue prints showing in detail just what should and
what should not be done in Europe when the certain
collapse of the Axis had become an historical fact.
Many times some of the
satisfied commentators have been bold enough to
suggest that the "Great Walter," seemed to be tak
ing a great deal for granted.
One of them wrote as follows:
"Wouldn't It be wise to leave the post-war picture of
France with a few vacant spaces, which later can be filled
in, instead of not only completing the picture but framing
it In the Herald's Park Avenue salon, for all readers to ad
mire? There is an old saying about the wisdom of not
counting your chickens until they are hatched. Mr. Lipp
mann is not only counting them, but has built a chicken
house to hold them with steam heat, patent sun-lamps, and
all the fixtures."
But on Christmas Day we note Mr. Lipnman had
a marked change of attitude and mind as the follow
ing quotation will show:
"This Is a very bad time Indeed to minimize the gravity
of the German offensive by reminding ourselves how soon
after Ludendorffs break-through in March, 1918, the Ger
man armies surrendered. Let us remember that the tide of
battle was not turned in 1918 by a comforting analogy; it
was turned by the desperate fighting of our allies and by an
enormous speeding up of the American reinforcements.
"The blunt truth is that all of us and 1 know of no ex
ceptionshave underestimated the power of our enemies.
We have allowed ourselves to see things as we wished to
see them, and not as they are. The spectacular victories
which we won in Europe and in the Pacific caused our en
emies to concentrate furiously in order to wage war.
"The victories caused us to be off guard, to think about
reconversion and demobilization, and to theorize and quar
rel about peace. What we have to do now is to regroup our
forces, mobilize to a far higher degree than we have yet
done, and readjust our political Ideal to the realities of a
long and hard war."
Q- E. D.I
and on an even keel.
Washme'toTiiana were rush-
the ton of a certain build-
sure would come.
the noDulace of robot
.. 1 -
ud on food-rationine, re
military activities, while
on harder than ever be
Puget Sound.
juvenile this insistence
to the heights of over-con
great strength, as well as
, J, i
in Washington want some
far as the present status
remarked "I shall return !"
Allied victory in France,
pontificator was drawing
less sanguine and self-
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, Dec. 28. A
strong, generally thoughtful edi
torial writer who is against the
Roosevelt, par
ticularly Mrs.
Roosevelt, re
gime spoke out
in several me
tropolitan p a .
p e r s recenUy:
(note. I think
the radicals
caUed him fas-
cist- minded
during the last
campaign, al
Paul MaUoa
though the
charge was of
a political nature and therefore
not Intended to be believed liter
ally):
"There Is only one way to as
sure ourselves of military
strength, whenever needed. That
way consists of a system of com
pulsory military training."
TTHAT is simply not true. There
are many ways of assuring
ourselves of military strength,
whenever needed, a logical,
straightforward way consists of
putting military training into the
high schools and colleges to de
velop, and keep trained, the nec
essary officer personnel, and en
larging and modernizing the na
tional guard, giving it weapons,
including airplanes and tanks.
artillery, ammunition and com
missary to develop a private per
sonnel. '
That would be the more effi
cient way, because it would be
constant, always up-to-date, al
ways ready to handle the latest
implements of warfare scienti
fically and efficiently, although
there are of course many other
things which must be done, in
cluding the maintenance of a
greater permanent military in
ventors' council with laborato
ries, continuance of West Point
and Annapolis at war size or
larger, and an. alert, ever watch
ful and efficient war department
t- see that we do not fall asleep
to dangers from without.
These are democratic ways.
The taking Of a boy from his
home, work and career for a
year of service In the army is a
Prussian method instituted by
the Prussian militarists after the
war of 1870. It must be an inef
ficient way of developing an
army because the Prussians have
never won with it,
e e
QN the opposite side of the
same fence a radical editorial
writer In a metropolitan dally,
(I think he is the very one who
called my above friend "fascist
minded" and certainly he thinks
the Roosevelt regime, and par
ticularly the Mrs. Roosevelt re
gime, is just about right on
everything), wrote recently:
"The only way this, country
can get away from maintaining
a very large army and develop
ing a militaristic caste system
after this war Is by compulsory
military training."
Is this not the strangest col
lection of bedfellows upon any
world mattress? Radicals, con
servatives, people who think
each other fascists or commun
ists, Mr. Roosevelt and the cham
ber of commerce, PM and the
New York Herald-Tribune, Mrs.
Roosevelt and "the fascist mind
ed" all enjoying this same de
lusion insistently.
For there is no more truth In
saying this is the only way to
"avoid a large army" than that
it is the only way to maintain
an army. It would be a new
large army each year.
But it would hardly be what
we would call a skilled army.
We would have to maintain an
other one for older men for de
fense. We would have to have
an air force constantly alert, a
corps bent on nullifying the ef
fect of rocket bombs, and what
other new weapons, daily, a
whole war department of Just as
much strength as if we did not
have compulsion in training.
These trainees would only be
reserves reserves that might
otherwise be obtained more ef
ficiently by a real national
guard.
e e
DOT a great many other peo
Bple are saying dally in the
papers a year of national service
would cure juvenile delinquen
cy, promote youth health, make
better citizens. These are all
non-military excuses for a mili
tary step, which lacks sound mil
itary grounds.
We handle crime otherwise.
Well why not handle our non
military problems In a non-military
way, or least In a demo
cratic way?
NEWBURN SENTENCING
DELAYED BY ILLNESS
' Passing of sentence upon
Woodrow Wilson Newburn,
found guilty by a circuit court
Jury of statutory rape, scheduled
for today, has been indefinitely
postponed due to the Illness of
Circuit Judge H. K. Hanna. New
burn is held in the county jaill
A motion for new trial, will be
filed by his counsel, Attorney O.
H. Bengtson.
Increase in the enrollment of
new student nurses in the U. S.
cadet nurse corps this fall ap
proximated 30,000, Dr. Thomas
Parran, surgeon general of the
United States Public Health
If M?)
Service, announced.
i'V
(Acmt Telephoto)
Mrs. Louise' Peete, who spent 18 years in prison for murder of Jacob O.
Denton in Los Angeles, Calif, in 1920, hides her face with purse at back
rard grave in Paclflo Palisades, Calif, where she admitted burying bode
of her employer. Sirs. Margaret Logan.
Sales Make Jobs
Babton Quizzes ClO's Demand for Mora "Shops'
Babson Park, Mass., Dec. 22
(Special Correspondence) When
Vice-President Wallace spoke to
the CIO convention in Chicago
he gave "small business" a big
hand. This drew another big
hand from the conventioneers.
Said he In substance: "After the
war, this nation eventually must
provide sixty million Jobs. To
promote employment, I urge
that a man of ambition and
ideas find a shack in an alley.
start up a business, and hire
workers."
Mr. Wallace further asked for
tax relief for "the little man
with the big idea." Although
constructive in Intent, .Mr. Wal
lace's talk stopped far short of
the core or the trouble. When
the unemployment crisis emerges
three years, say after war
fare ends - why more "shops"?
The need will be not for more
inside shops but for more out
side salesmen. Small businesses
rent stores but they do not
make jobs.
Shortage of salesmanship will
be the reef on which some of
Mr. Wallace's cleverest me
chanics may fall apart. Appar
ently some of the employment
analysts invite disillusionment
if they believe that every expert
tool-maker can take his patent
or project and shoestring it Into
a fast growing, heavily pay
rolled Industry. The mechanical
genius normally Is an indiffer
ent businessman. He can handle
any metal but gold or silver. He
can hold to the thousandth of an
inch more readily than the
hundredth of a dollar. My friend
Thomas A. Edison was some
what of an inventor. He used to
tell me: "Babson, it takes more
to get an idea rolling than to
get the idea."
Bumper Harvests
Grow From Seed-Corn
I would be the last to dis
parage humble beginnings. My
own business activities origin
ated 40 years ago in the kitchen
of a cottage on a narrow street
in a quiet village; but the
growth was very slow. Most
large employers of labor today
treasure faded photographs of
the modest buildings where the
enterprises began. But the men
who created these industries
spent their time outside selling
on the road, not inside waiting
for customers. Also, may we re
member what U. S. failure sta
tistics show.
With all goodwill toward as
piring founders, the evidence
compiled by the credit report
ing agencies proves the fraility
of lone-man ventures. There are
long years of battling before the
corner is turned and the enter
prise can provide employment in
and substantial volume. Unless
all past records a fa meaningless,
the only prompt and realistic
way to enlarge "Help Wanted"
advertising columns is by
strenghtcning the selling and
merchandizing campaigns of ex
isting and established concerns.
Sales Careermen the
Real Independents
Nobodv besrudees Indenen-
dence of action. Aspiration is at
the heart of Americanism. How
ever, thousands of strongly con
nected salesmen, allied with
sound organizations, are In real
ity in business for themselves.
Backed by resources and re
serves, well placed salesmen
win a free-swinging career
and a breadth of accomplish
mentimpossible for the aver
age hand-to-mouth, caged pro
prietor. Ostensibly the propri
etor is his own boss and working
for himself. In truth, he may be
,7
the unregistered employee of his
creditors. He may be paying a
ceiling price for his tin badge
of independence.
Hats off to every ambitious
auto-repair shop and newscount
er. We need such. Nonetheless,
employment stems from sales
and more sales and still more
sales. This is true whether the
enterprise in a hole-in-the-wall or
a Willow Run. Tax relief will
aid. Less interference by Wash
ington is urgent. However, you
recall that failures were high
even back when tax levies were
low. Moreover, the first essen
tial of taxation, Is to have some
thing to tax. That something
originates from outside sales
men, who also have their "big
idea," namely, the power and
inspiration of teamwork.
Therefore, as a statistician
grohnded in the records, I in
sist that a step-up of merchan
dizing efficiency is the most
hopeful answer to the question
of how a man can help most to
create sixty million jobs. Furth
ermore, this likewise answers
the query: What is the best pre
paration for those who want to
have a business of their own? It
is, become an outside salesman
for an established concern.
WIFE CONFESSES
STRANGLING MATE
Highland Park, Mich., Dec. 26
(U.R) Wayne county authorities
said today a first-degree murder
Mrs. Nina Housden, 33 who
CnnfpsspH ehn ilrnniflafl hai
who confessed she strangled her
husband across the street from
the police station and started to
St. Louis with his dismemhisreri
body in the trunk of her auto-
moDiie.
Mrs. Housden, who accused
her hushnnH. n rrncennnfrv h
driver, of bragging of his affairs
wim otner women, was arrested
at Toledo. O.
Mrs. Housden said her hus
band returned home from his
run Thursday. They went to a
motion picture theater, then had
several drinks.
She succeeded in getting him
arunK, she told authorities, then
took him to her apartment fac
ing the Highland Park police
station.
' She strangled ' him with a
clothes line, she said, then went
to bed. She kent thn hnriv In hot-
apartment for two days, waiting
ior aenvery of an automobile
she had bought.
Unabln tn parrv 4tiA lnn.nAl.nJ
body down the stairs, she dis-
memoerea It with a razor,
stuffed it into a canvas bag, put
it in the trunk of the automobile
and started to St. Louis where
she planned to dispose of it
ASSASSIN PRAISED
Paris, Dec. 26 (U.R) The
newspaper Franc Tireur paid
editorial t r I h ( .
i vi i tl J 10
Fernand Bonnier De La Cha-pelli-,
who was executed two
years ago today for the assassi
nation of Admiral Jean Darlan
The editorial called him "a
young hero who died gloriously
iuimiii aown uarian, a
man of Petain and a man of
Hitler."
WASHING MACHINES
REPAIRED
Parts k Service on All Makes
B & 8 Washer Shop
408 E. Main Phone S302
Flight o' Time
Mediord and Jackson Co. His
tory fzom the files oi the Mail
Tribune 10. 20. and 34 T"
age.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
December 28, 1934)
(It was Wednesday)
Trial of Bruno Hauptmann,
charged with the murder and
kidnaping of son of Col. Lind
bergh to start January 2.
Tragedies, causing 166 deaths
through nation mar Christmas
holiday.
Outlook for 1935 bright but
dubious.
Japan to consider largest mili
tary budget in its history.
Cloudy with occasional rain.
High 42, low 31 degrees.
New Ford models on display
here Saturday.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 28, 1924
(It was Friday)
Gold Hill to fight legislation
curbing powers of cities to make
arrests for speeding.
Illinois preacher and woman
found guilty of poison murder of
her husband.
Fair and continued cold. High
48, low 26 degrees.
Forty-mile-an-hour wind blows
all night over valley.
All Christmas day records
broken by low temperature of
11.8 degrees, high 42.
France reports discovery of
gun and munition depot in Ber
lin, In cunningly devised hiding
place. Evacuation of Cologne de
layed. THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
TODAY
December 26, 1910
(It was Monday)
John Wilkinson, with ticket
No. 591 wins "Flanders 20" car
raffled for benefit of Crater
Lake road fund.
Christmas day was bright and
cheery, with warm sun shining.
Name of Jackson ntrpt Is
changed to Jackson boulevard. "
McLeod
McLeod. Dec. 26 Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Conn nr.ri win
Jimmy, left for Los Angeles Dec.
23 to spend the holidays. .
Elk Creek school h 1 1 He
Christmas program the evening
of Dec 22 with a large attend
ance.
Mr. and Mrs. William Rtsmloe
left Dec. 21 for Lna Armpit
where they will spend the holi-
aays. Accompanying them as far
as Sacramento wero Mn. T.pp
Meriman and son.
Upper Rogue grange had e
DOtluck dinner Dec. 21. Fnllonr
ing the dinner a program was
enjoyea Dy a large crowd. Mrs.
Carl Richardson decorated the
nan ior the occasion.
Mr. and Mrs Wnllrai. miw
tertained with two tables of
bridge Dec. 16. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Abbott, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Coon and Mr.
and Mr. RnnsM Airtpii
Among those attending the
r-ru5peci, nigni C1UO, Dec. 21
from the McLpnit Hicfrit n.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Carlton, Mr.
and Mrs. John Dolenshek, Mr.
and Mrs. Herb Carlton Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ash, Mrs. Clarence
Lande, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Ax
tell, Mrs. Neil Hoyez, Miss Mary
Ann Brill and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Chamberlain.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Johnson
left Dec. 22 for San Jose, Cal.,
to make their home. '
Miss Alice Brill arrived home
Dec. 23 from San Jose college to
spend the holidays with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Brill.
Use Mall Tribune Want 1.
A
Conger Morris
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BOY LEFT
CUSTODY
Yakima. Wash., Dec. 26 U.B
Virginia Ivey, 19-year-old wait
ress whim police had sought for
more than a month for the slay,
ing of 5-year-old Virgil (Butchy)
Langley whose foster parents
had left him in her care, calmly
admitted today that she kUled
the boy with a wine bottle after
returning from a party.
"He had gotten out of his bed
and he refused to go back," she
told Deputy Prosecutor Lincoln
Shropshire, who said she would
be arraigned, probably today, on
first-degree murder charges. The
slaying occurred in her apart
ment at Toppenish, Wash.
Miss Ivey was arrested at
Portland, Ore., Christmas eve in
a hotel where she was working
as a chambermaid. Authorities
had picked up her trail twice be
fore and missed her by a matter
of minutes as she moved on. She
said she had been on the verge
of giving herself up several
times.
Miss Ivey said she agreed to
look after the boy when his fos
ter mother, Mrs. Grace Langley,
went to Mullen. Idaho, to work.
His foster father, Virgil Lang
ley, was working In California,
she said. The Langley's had rear
ed the child since Infancy, al
though they had never legally
adoDted him, she said.
The blonde, mild - mannered
waitress said she had never
spanked or mistreated the child
until the fatal beating on No
vember 22. Miss Ivey, who po
lice said had been picked up in
Spokane several times on morals
charges, showed the effect of her
month of flight. She was nerv
ous and her finger-nails were
chewed to the quick.
Of those persons examined by
tuberculosis control officers. 13
persons in every 1,000 showed
evidence of significant pulmo
nary tuberculosis, the U. S.
Public Health Service said.
REPLACE your old oil
burner with a new
MONTAG
Lesnard Electric Co.
309 E. Main Phone 4427
On JEWELRY. CAMERAS
and MUSICAL INSTRU
MENTS. Used and unre
deemed lewelry at great
lav-rigs
PEOPLES LOAN GO.
229 Mi C. Main Street
State License P 137
Room For
One More Good
Mechanic
Best working conditions In
Medford. Clean shop, well
equipped, automatic heat, hot
water, high rate of pay with
paid vacation. Large parts
stock.
See LeRoy Cline or
Frank Humphrey
HUMPHREY MOTORS
33 S. Riverside Dial 4980
pseHW
Carlos W. Morrll