Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 20, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    OM MA1L-TMBUMI
B psi j sn bs SooUhsm OrM
Mil the Mall Trlhaae"
Ball? ltp SaroiSar
Published br
IdSDrORD PRINTINO CO.
fl.t Nortit Fir St. Phon IU1
BOBERT W. RITHU Editor
SRNEST R. GILS TRAP, Manager
RZRB OREY. AdverlUIn Mrr.
I C rERGDSON, Mnlnr Editor
ARTHUR PERRY. Sunday MMor
MRS. OLIVE STARCHER. ". Ed'tol
CERALD LATHAM, Circulation Mar.
An Independent Wrgipipit
fettered a second ! matter at
Medford. OreBun. under Act of
Mnrch 3. 187"
gUBSCHIPTION RATES
Mr Mell In Advance:
Dsll nd Sunday one year, also
pny end Sunder elx months J 00
foallr end Sunday three mo.. Jin
Dally end Sunday one month .70
By Carrier In Advance Meord,
Ashland. Central Point, Jackeon
vllle, Gold Hill. Phoenix, Talent,
end on motor routes:
Pally and Sunday one year U0
Deity and Sunday one month .75
All terma cash In advance.
Official Paper of U,. City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leaaed Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
or .CIRCULATIONS
Advertialnl RepresentaUre
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY, -DJO.
Offlcee In New York, Chicago. De
troit, San rranelaco, Loa Angeles,
Seattle, Portlend. St. Louia, Atlanu,
Vancouver. B. C-
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
Ths roport from Frankfort-Am-Maln
revealing Eva Braun,
the girl Iriond of Herr Hitler,
was plump and liked rich food,
truck a sympathetic note among
ths fair of America, It la said.
"Like Judy O'Grady and the
Colonel's Lady," they are sis
ters under the fat.
e e e
It will take most of 104(1 be
fore Congreas will be able -to
vote on the bill providing the
compulsory military training
for youths. The 18-year-old
boys can't vote but their Maws
can.
e
"A fried ham supper was
served at the close of the work."
(SUverton Item In Salem States
man).. "John Tyson has finish
ed his new smokehouse and
painted It green." (Paisley
Item). "HOG LACK TO LAST
ANOTHER YEAR." (Hdllne
S. T. Chronicle.)
e e
The OPA has announced
prices on new autos. By the end
of the last semester they should
start showing up on high school
parking lots.
a a
Ulen MUlis of the Los Angeles
environs, Just out of the Navy
la here visiting. In the mld-20's
he was tired bank clerk here.
He la still an ardent devotee of
the Rogue River Valley climate,
fishing and touchdowns.
e e e
The campus wolves at "Old
Oregon" are still In hot pursuit
of the football scalp of the foot
ball coach. He should not be
downhearted, and remember
Gen. (B.&G.) Patton also had his
bad moments.
e
A volcano expert reports
smoke arising from the waters
of Crater Lake is due to some
minor subterranean devilment,
and there Is not much chance of
a Class AA eruption that would
bury Prospect in lava like Pom
peii. Besides, Dewey Hill, the
Prospect hired man, Is too busy
sawing wood and shoveling
snow off roofs to fight rivers of
fir and red-hot rocks.
e e e
Due to building costs, labor
shortage, and threats of infla
tion, people are unable to build
the "dream house" they plann
ed during the war. They can
keep on dreaming. There is no
shortage of, or ceiling upon
dreams,
e
There Is considerable senti
mental fretting about feeding
"the poor starving children of
Germany." Nobody wants chil
dren In any land, friend or foe,
to go hungry. Children did in
lands the Nazis conquered. Many
people, not flint-hearted, re
member the "starving German
children" of the 11120s were the
backbone of Hitler's grey-green
legions It took most of the
world's might to conquer only a
few short months ago.
e e
THE 'BLARSTED H'lNGLISHI'
"That paying taxes point has
been my best one over here. The
other day when I was In a group
of Limey downtown, I let 'em
have it straight. And then while
they were still quiet 1 went on to
really read them the riot act. 1
even went so far as to tell them
that if America is to support
England there would have to be
some changes made in the way
they do things over here with
the directing coming from Amer
ica. Well, believe it or not, 1 got
away with this craik, without
either having to fight or run. I
don't know Just why but they
even Invited meover to a pri
vate club where the guests'
money Is no good to continue
the conversation. Can you beat
that?" (Astoria Astorian-Budg-
Tuesday. Not. 10, 1141
Editorial Correspondence
Boston, Mass., Nov. 15 Here
the Boston iravener ionium:
"no nnn hold.un in Medford!"
Guess w better look up the
be quit a place.
Don't suddos the Boston weather is a very exciting item to
our readers but can't resist announcing it is still raining and the
vlaihilitv tust over th chimney
straight days of rain.
Perhaps it would be an exaggeration to say Boston has th
worst newspapers In the country, but certainly, with th exception
of the Christian Science Monitor,
Will, moreover, say this "without
no LARGE city in th country has
cally as has Boston. The first page make-ups of th afternoon
Daners are disgraceful, a perfect hodge-podg of continued
articles, an illegible mess!
We are Interested to note, from th N. Y. papers that the
"Rugged Path," starring Spencer Tracy has opened at lest In New
York, after tryouts both her and in Washington. We saw the
Sherwood play in Washington and considered it terrible. The New
York reviews are not quite so derogatory, but those we have read
certainly do a fine Job of damning with faint praise, VERY faint!
e e a e e
Let It be recorded for future historians that on th evening of
Nov. 13, 1949, the front-page banner of th Boston Glob read as
follows:
"Decided To Keep A-Bomb Secret."
And on the same date the front page banner on th Christian
Science Monitor read:
"UNO Control of Atomic
Attlee." ,
There you are, which paper
Surely to keep the A-bomb secret is NOT to place control of
it In the hands of a public cooperative international body like the
United Nations Organization.
Yet the head-writers in both
The Attlee-Trumnn pronouncement does declare the "know-how
of the atomic bomb" should be kept secret for the present or "un
til appropriate safeguards could
the snmo and,
It also stated that the responsibility for proposing a world
wide control of atomic energy and Its elimination as an Instru
ment of war be vested in the United Nations, and action on same
be taken at the earliest possible moment.
What does it all add up to anyway?
The Attlee government came her with a definite proposal
which was to give the atom bomb
council, or at least to the Big Five, th United States, Russia,
China, Great Britain and France.
In exchange for this concession
tain things, chiefly to certain amendments which would strengthen
the United Nations pact, such as, it was presumed. elimination
of the one-power veto.
Whether this British proposal
finite, clear-cut unequivocal.
There was no double-talk about giving th UNO. or other
nations, the scientific knowledge of atom-power which no doubt
they have already, and not giving them the knowledge that would
enable them to make the bomb.
Tn nur rnmhlai u Km 1 I Rmlnn
- J ww.Tw.. tuucj na icni UCU IIUII1 all
authoritative source that three months before his death President
Roosevelt came to the Lahey Clinic in this city for a complete
iiii'in-iip. nn cunuiuon was lounci men to Be not critical but
serious.
Weather note: The rain has
Boston Is even more popular than Washington as a try-out
station for theatrical productions. Some plays that have failed here
have mado a go of it in New York; but according to our informa
tion, no plays that have succeeded here Bostonlans are very dis
criminating have ever failed in Manhattan. If this is correct
then a musical comedy now showing here called "The Day Before
Spring" Is duo for a record run in New York for it Is still playing
to parked houses her and has been running nearly three weeks.
R.W.R,
News Behind
The News
By Paul Malion
Washington, Nov, 30 Mr.
Attic did not get his way about
giving the atom bomb to Russia
or to a United
Nations com
mission. Twenty - four
hours before
t h decision
was anuounc
e d , however,
some of the
best informed
correspondents
were writing
that the com
t'aul uaunn
mission s 0 1 u -
tion had been
agreed upon, There were, at
that time, some grounds for be
lief that the British had induced
President Truman to change his
mind. The mere publication of
such a suggestion brought his
best advisers into action, and he
stood his ground firmly.
e e e
'THE British prim minister.
who apparently had a major
hand in writing the announce
ment, succeeded nevertheless In
composing an exceptionally in-
tie ni.eina
It
Sssauall
FROZEN
ARE NOW READY
At Th
Valley Locker Co.
Talent, Oregon
Is another arresting banner In
Massachusetts "Medford." Must
- pots on Beacon street, rive
the. local press is pretty terrible.
fear of successful contradiction":
as poor newspapers typographi
Energy Backed by Truman and
is right?
instances seem to have a casa.
be provided" to prevent abuso of
secret to the United Nations
Russia was to consent to cer
was wise or unwls it was de
ttrlaw i i a
now tvned to a light snowl
tereatlng. If elusive, text. This
document which stands in the
natur of a momentous world
proclamation on th most Im
portant sublcct confronting man.
kind requires analytical under
standing, indeed it may lead to
breaking up the Truman policy
in months or years to come un
less the president remains In
sistent and alert
The first point, th premise,
asserts "there can be no ade
quate military defense" against
the bomb and therefor no na
tion should mononoliio It
This assertion not only contra
dicts mUCh Scientific uniJ.nra
and the entire history of science
which has always to data found
defenses adequate for Its Inven
tions, it also contradicts other
assertions of the Attlee text.
Point six maintains the spread
ing of Information about the
bomb should wait until science
has found th answer, th pre
cise words are:
"We are not convinced that
the spreading of specialized In
formation regarding th practi
cal application of atomic energy,
before it Is possible to devise
effective reciprocal, and enforce
able safeguards acceptable to
nations, would contribute to a
constructive solution of the prob
lem of the atomic bomb."
e e e
IN short, point six must b per
sistently maintained against
FOOD
E W
th premise of point one, If the
Truman policy Is to prevail. Mr.
Truman can maintain it only if
h continues to get popular sup
port for his Just and reasonable
position.
There ar other revealing
phases of th momentous text.
It says:
"W believe th fruits of sci
entific research should b mad
available to all nations."
Then it proposes a United
Nations commission for th in
spection of armaments a rec
ommendation which originated
In this column at th time of the
San Francisco conference.
Now if this pledge of inter
national inspection of armaments
is kept, and thoroughly applied,
the giving away of military sec
rets will not be necessary.
To put it another way on the
same thumbnail, our official and
public insistenc must be main
tained for inspection, or the giv
ing away of the fruits of our
scientific developments will be
come a dangerous, foolish, even
suicidal.
CONSIDER Russia in this re
spect. She has isolated her
self. If we give her all our
scientific fruits and she main
tains her isolation against in
spection by us and an Interna
tional body the very fact that
she does such a thing casts such
a reasonable suspicion upon free
fruit-giving as to make it worth
less as a world peace move.
Now "do not conclude hastily
that Mr. Truman and our gov
ernment know all about these
things and will take care of
them, or that the possibilities
opened in this momentous text
represent my imagination of a
remote possibility. The wrong
philosophy la already in the
text, balanced by th right
philosophy.
Thus the text has left us with
an obligation to maintain the
right part of It against misinter
pretation. .
TAX OFFICE SWAMPED
BY BIG MAIL RECEIPT
The tax collection department
of the sheriff's office this week
started working on the heavy
mail payments of current taxes.
Final date for receiving the
three per cent discount rebate
was Nov. 15. It will be a week
or 10 days before final figures
on the payments will be avail
able. It Is anticipated that total tax
payments were heavier than last
year. A majority of the pay
ments were for the full year.
Large taxpayers such as the
California-Oregon Power com
pany, the Southern Pacific rail
road and other corporations
made their payments by mall.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Partly cloudy
tonight and Wednesday with for In
morning. Little change In tempera
ture.
Oregon; Increasing cloudiness to
night and Wednesday with light rain
prohahle In northwest oortlon Wed.
nesciay. sngntly warmer In northwest
portion tonight. Fog In valleys. Gentle
northerly wind off coaat becomlnr
variaoie.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature a year ago today:
Highest 32: lowest S3.
Total monthly precipitation 31
incnes.
Excess for the month 1-91 Inches.
Total precipitation alnce September
i, iw. on inenca.
F.xress for the season 1.17 Inehea.
Relative humidity at 4:30 p. m. yes
terday 02; 4:30 today 98.
Tomorrow
Sunrise 7:08 a m.: Sunset 4:48 p m.
Obserrallona Taken At 4:30 A. M.,
120 Meridian Time
High Low Prec
Boise
Boaton -.wm........
Chicago
Denver ...
Knreka
Havre
Loe Angelas .
Medford ,,
New York
Omaha .......
Phoenix
Portland
Reno
Roseburg ...........
Salt lake
San Francisco
37
S2
25
43
30
33
.In
-R7
.... 6.1
60
sa
41
7
3
75
no
38
. SJ
3d
2
. 4
01
51
34
Seattle
.. 47
Spokane
Washington, D.
Yakima
-.. 33
... 81
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
when irs 7HiMUf puiA
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN T7Ks-utU'?Xt.sA
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN IT'S "?KMif ?1tJ
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN ITS TftfilHtHf 'fxtdi
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
wh en irs "TKtxHiHf y-uJi
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN ITS ??r!f'?1td4.
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
.
l- I A lit 2
Flight o Time
Medford and Jackson Co. His
tory from th ill of th Mail
Tribun 10. 20 and 34 rars
jo.
TEN YEARS AGO
November 20, 183S
(It Was Wednesday)
Hitch hiking families provide
problem for local police, who
urge arrangements be made to
give them overnight meals ana
beds.
Medford viewed as light for
army air base.
Cloudy with rain. High 47,
low 31.
Turkeys sell for JT and 28
cents per pound in Portland.
Owen-Oregon mill to close
soon because of wintry weather.
Italians defeats Ethiopia's best
in big battle.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 20, 1925
(It Was Thursday)
father of President Coolldge
near end of life span.
Fair and normal. High 88
low 36.
Ex-Kalser of Germany lives
in luxury at Doom.
Norma Talmadge In "GaU'
stark" at the Craterian with Eu
gene O'Brien.
Butt Creek resident protest
sticky condition of county road.
Medford high Black Tornado
defeats Roseburg 102 to 0.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AOO
November 20, 1911
(It Was Monday)
Sonttle faces water famine due
to break in main supply pipes.
Rain. High 52, low 32.
Ornver Corum attends to busi
ness matters in Ashland.
New high school building at
Ashland completed.
Eugene high defeats Medford
ft tn 0. Isaac was a tower
strength for the locals, and
Ralph Burgess showed great
form throuehout the contest.
The Medford line held firm most
of the time.
II
IS EUROPEANS
The Brethren Service commit
tee of the Church of the Breth
ren is taking part In the Seeds
of Goodwill program, which Is
a nation-wide effort to provide
relief for starving people on de
vastated lands in Europe, ac
cording to Stanley G. Keller,
pastor of the local church. Ore
gon churches will contribute
vetch seed while churches in
other states will send seed in
digenous to their communities,
Keller said. Brethren churches
In Oregon plan to hav a carload
of vetch seed, 30 tons, ready for
shipment to Italy by Dec. 1, the
pastor said. Each sack will carry
a tag with the name and address
of the donor. The seed will be
distributed by the Brethren
Service committee in coopera
tion with UNRRA.
Other projects carried on by
the service branch of the church
are clothing collections, milk
cows for relief and canned and
dehydrated foods. Help from
anyone who Is interested Is wel
come, Keller added.
CARn Or THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation to friends of
William Anderson for cards and flow
ers and kindness shown during his
Illness and death.
Mrs. Effle Johnson. Mrs. Merle
Hand. Mr. Perl Williams.
Tut trots, tM...
CAKES AND
UMei PASTRIES
tip
FERTILIZER FOR
MADE AVAILABLE
According to word received
by County Agent R. G. Fowler,
a supply of ammonium sulphate
for Oregon farmers available
immediately has been assured
through arrangements for man
ufacturing at least 2500 tons of
this material, and possibly 5000
tons, at the new aluminum plant
at Salem.
Final arrangements for the
supply were made during a visit
In Washington of Arthur S.
King, extension specialist in
soils, who enlisted the aid of
Senator Guy Cordon and the re
construction finance corpora
tion. The Columbia Metals cor
poration acting as agents for the
RFC is operating the Salem
plant and will do the manufac
turing. Although It was necessary for
the OSC extension service to
purchase the entire quantity
from the Columbia Metals cor
poration, the material will be
distributed through local dealers
who agree to handle it on a lim
ited margin. King explains.
These maximum margins are $2
per ton. for sales made directly
off of a car or truck, and $4
per ton for material that passes
through the dealer's warehouse.
The entire cost to the growers
will be approximately the same
as the regular price for ammon
ium sulphate in past years.
Government Aiding
Government aid in making the
emergency supply available in
Oregon was obtained on the
basis that, without the unusual
arrangement, growers would be
left with practically no ammon
ium sulphate available for such
vital crops as grass seed, pas
tures and early vegetables. On
this basis the RFC agreed to sub
sidize the operation to a certain
extent and have raw materials
shipped to the Salem plant for
manufacturing. No other supply
was available now or in sight
this season in this region, says
King.
Actual distribution of the am
monium sulphate will be han
dled by the Woodburn Feed and
Supply company. Orders can be
sent to them directly by dealers
or through King's office. All
county agents have been notified
of the arrangements and can ad
vise growers or local dealers on
further details.
SIMLWYPE
E PEWS
TO "SEE"
Hollywood, Nov. 20 U.R)
Partial ability for the totally
blind to "see" through "ear
sight" has been built into a lit
tle box resembling a twin-lensed
camera, Movie Photographer
Joseph Walker said today.
The "photoelectric rang find
er for the blind," about the size
and shape of a folding postcard
size kodak, will enable blind
persons to determine the size,
distance, direction, nature and
color of nearby objects, Walker
believes.
"I am anxious, however, not
mrm
if h'A
3mv i5.vr
to build any fals hope that
my apparatus is going to be
more than the most limited kind
of substitute for eyes," the cam
eraman warned.
To Recognise Objects
"With practice, the blind
should now be able to recognize
hundreds of previously unrecog
nizable objects and detect street
curbings, but my box is not de
veloped to the point where the
user can safely cross crowded
intersections or make his way
about unaided."
Ths device, now undergoing
tests by the Braille Institute of
America, differs entirely from
radar equipment which also is
being studied as potential aid
to the blind.
Lsnie Separated
Walker, formerly assistant to
Lee De Forest, the "father" of
radio, explained that the audi
tory range finder uses two mo
tion-picture- camera lenses 10
inches apart and two photoelec
tric cells hooked into a buzzer
and earphone system inside the
box.
"Being separated, each lens
gets a slightly varied light pic
ture of objects: The closer the
object the greater the displace
ment of these images and high
er the voltage put out," he ex
plained. Thus the closer sightless
person comes to an obstruction,
the louder the buzzing in the
box becomes. A thumb screw
adjustment reveals the distance
of a stationary object, while a
moving one changes frequently
until "out of sight range." Size
and shape also can be deter
mined. REV. POLLOCK ASSUMES
EAGLE PT. PASTORATE
Eagle Point, Nov. 20 The
Rev. Floyd Pollock and family
have moved to Eagle Point from
Jefferson, Ore., and the Rev.
Pollock has assumed the pastor
ate of the Eagle Point Commun
ity Church. For the past year
and a half students from the
Northwest Christian college of
Eugene have served the church.
The Rev. Pollock will hold a
Thanksgiving service at 8 p. m.
Thursday. Anyone interested Is
cordially invited to attend.
BIRTHS
RUDY To Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert, Rout 2, box 382B, Nov. 17,
1045, a boy, nine pounds, at Sa
cred Heart hospital.
MORGAN To Mr. and Mrs.
L. C, Route 1, box 545B, Nov.
15, 1945, a girl, seven pounds,
at Osteopathic Clinic.
MORTON To Mr. and Mrs.
A., 440 So. Riverside, Nov. 19,
1945, a boy, seven pounds, Os
teopathic Clinic.
HUNT'S
ICE CREAM SHOP
CORNER OF MAIN & BARTLETT
WILL BE OPEN
BETWEEN THE HOURS OF
11 A.M. and 2 P.M.
THANKSGIVING DAY
For Phone Order Dial 4622
UNITED
SERVICE
AT THE
First Baptist Church
Central At Fifth
i
November 22 at 10:30 a.m.
a. S W
eABB OF THANM
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation to our
friends, neighbors and the pallbearers
for their many klndnesaei and for the
beautiful flower, hi our recent
bereavement of our husband and fath-
"mts. 7. W. Gray. Mrs. Clarence
Keiznr, Mrs. Henry Nledermcyer.
Use Mall Tribune want Ada.
fjifkfcfy ReBem Distress of
SneezpStuffy
l!eadCc!ss
A little Va-tro-nol trp
each nostril promptly
relieves snlffly, sturty
distress of head colds
makes breathing easier,
AIM help eiHint many
colds from developing; l
If used in time. Try itl I
You'll Ilk itl Follow
unctions In package.
1
VICKSVATROtlOL
Strange Subject
Evangelist Will
Not Announce
Friday Night
7:30 p. m.
Assembly of God Church
11 Newtown St.
There's a
Deal for
YOU al
Humphrey's
if you want to
Buy or Sell a
USED CAR
Humphrey Motors
Used Car Exchange
33 S. Riverside Ave.
String Duet
Vivian and Geneviv Bush
Vibra-harp Solo
Mr. M. L. Davidson
Vocal Solo
Rev. E. S. Hansen
Sermon
Rev D. Daniels
President Ministerial Union
el- H. Havnr-I ('ni l