EIGHT MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE Thursday. Jan. 10, 1948
MDFOIU)JifwTRIBUNI
veryone la Southern Oreiea
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Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March , 1879
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Mtmitt
OIECWN
PlIllSHEt
nut
SOt)IAII0
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
The nickel clear Is staging a
"come-back," the tobacco Indus
try reports. The nickel Is as good
as It ever was, smokers report.
e e e
Veterans home from the wars
are picking up the threads of
civilian life fast. Several are
wearing cowboy shirts, so loud
they make the Applegate-Butte
Creek variety sound like a
mouse squeak.
e
Some valley democrats com
plain President Truman's talk
to the nation made them want
to orawl under the radio. Alf
Landon of Kansas had the same
effect on Republicans when he
was running for President in
1038, and they didn't make It
either.
Some of the new model autos
will be sold on a modification
of the "lay-away" plan. This
should not be confused wtth
CIO plan to make them on their
lay-around plan.
e e
An .18 cent per pound boost
In the price of butter, to the
housewife Is reported favored
by the secretary of agriculture
The Increase Is expected to In
crease butter production, and
may cause miners to pound their
old dredges Into churns.
e e
London reports the Russians
have succeeded In making an
atomic bomb, "the size of a
tennis ball." High Washington
D. C, officials doubt Russia has
an atomic bomb, or for that mat
ter, a tennis ball.
Editorial Correspondence
New Orleans, Jan. 8 Thla Is the long way around, but it Is
the warm way too, so we chose it. We have had enough cold to
last us for 10 years!
Before leaving Washington had another "look-see" at the
Pearl Harbor inquiry with Admiral Stark still on the stand. The
.ju.i , . mnh hpitpr showlne than the day before, his
memory was clearer, his disposition better, he even displayed a
sense of humor (the latter, unusual in high navy or army men.)
oo( r.miKnti allied the admiral if he recalled a speech
made by Senator Pepper of Florida in Boston in the fall of '41 in
which Pepper maintained the U. S. navy had drawn a line in the
Pacific and If the Japs crossed It there would be war.
"If I had heard it I would have given 11 no wcigm, was me
reply. Even Senator Lucas, who looks very ayspepuc mese aays:
laughed at that slap at the Flamingo "lire-ball.
A. aovernl members of the False Friends club will attest, the
. . .. ...
skipper of this department was surprised when the war wun japa:
onHprf. Wa attributed It all to the atomic bomb.
Admiral Stark, we were Interested to observe, had the same
Idea, at least as far as the final Japanese surrender was con
cerned. He had predicted it would not be auutiis an actual
Allied invasion of the Jap mainland.
It also came out that the admiral had Deen censurea Dy me
ecretary of the navy last August as an official who should be
Blven no ass gnment "requiring superior judgment, mis was
result of the naval board inquiry into Pearl Harbor.
One could not help but admire the attitude of the witness in
frankly admitting this, in fact he, rather than the committee,
was responsible for bringing It out.
Yet while this second appearance revealed the admiral In
far more favorable light than the first, we would guess Secretary
Forrestal's action was Justified. No doubt the admiral Is a very
fine man of the highest patriotism and with a good navy War
record, but he imoressed this department as definitely too old for
an Important Job, his memory supping ana mental ana emotional
reactions slow.
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
On The Side-By e. v. Duriing
(Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
HOW LIKE A LADY
(Press Dispatch)
"I like It here. I haven't
anything to be ashamed of.
But I wish Pappy would get
in touch with me. I Intend to
geek employment here."
Asked what kind of work
she would do, she said:
"I'm darned If I know."
e e e
The army has ordered Ger
man political leaders to cease
denunciation of the Allied In
ternational policies. They must
think they are unnaturalized
residents of America, telling the
native born how to vote.
e e e
"I am shooting anyone bring
Ing guns on my land. Won't miss.
Phyllis Williamson, Enterprise."
(Wallowa County, Ore., Chief
tan) Another war front heard
from.
e e
"Pappy" Boylngton, an air
hero of tho war with Japan, Is
no hero to a New York socialite
he Jilted, and left waiting In
Reno. She got revenge by mak
ing public a series of telegrams.
Pappy" sent her. In cold type
they don't make as hot reading
a. when bawled by a lawyer,
before a Jury In a crowded court
room. e
"Because of Its unusual alpine
floral wonders an area near
Mount Adams In Washington has
been proposed as a state park.
Goodbye floral wonder s."
(Bend Bulletin) An eastern
Oregon scribe casts llRht on the
well-known Inclination of hu
mans to pull up everything by
the roots.
e e
SHORT, SAD STORY
"Another Innocent, out to
make a clean-up, had bought
more trees than there were in
dividuals In the village where
he lived, far more even than
one to each family. This babe
in the wood expected that the
Joneses would buy one apiece
for Pop and Mom and Sally and
Willie and Grandma. Of course
he went broke. (Woodlawn,
Cal, Democrat).
Superficially at least there Is almost as marked and sudden
chanee in crossing the Mason and Dixon line heading south, as
crossing the Mexican border in the same direction. Une country
south of Washington, D. C, is surprisingly unlike the country
north of it as far as surface appearances are concerned, the people
dress differently, talk differently, and of course along the rail
roads at least the prevailing complexion is not as in the north
white, but black. A stranger from abroad waking up in boutn
Carolina or Georgia after New York might well assume he had
left the United States and entered some foreign country.
On our first train trip to the South about 10 years ago we
took the Seaboard line, and decided when we reached Florida we
had made a bad choice. For we could not believe the South could
be as dreary and depressing and down-at-the-heel, as the views
from a car-window indicated. This is our third trip, however, and
we know now that the Atlantic coast country south of Washington
is Just that; no matter what train you take, dreary and depressing
e e e
Of course the time of year has something to do with it, the
winter where there is no "blanket of the beautiful" to cover the
ugliness being no time for any landscape to appear to Us best ad
vantage.
Yet regardless of the season, we fall to see how any fair-
minded observer could deny that the least attractive portion of
the United States from the standpoint of a train traveller is the
Atlantic seaboard south of Washington. Visually it isn't worth
half a mill a mile, not to mention from three cents to slxl
e e e e e .
And Georgia, we should say, Is the worst. (If Edison Marshall
writes an indignant letter of protest from Augusta, well, we will
be happy to print it, for anything he writes for publication is
worth or was, a dollar a word!)
In the first place there isn't a tree in the state larger than a
tooth-pick, nor an acre of land that isn't a reddish-brown metallic
looking clay, It may be fertile but it doesn't look It. There
isn't a fnrm-house that doesn't need repair and a coat of paint, a
chicken that doesn t need a coat of tar and feathers without the
tar, also a thorough delouslng, or a razor-backed pig , that
doesn't need a hot bath, heavy doses of vitamin D, and a long rest
cure, If It la to provide more than ONE plate of spare-ribs before
next Christmas!
No wonder the share-croppers of Georgia are complaining,
for what Is there to share? It may be different In the larger cities,
Atlanta for example, which has Peach Tree street, headquarters of
the Ku Klux Klan and Coco Cola, But the few minutes we spent
there In tho rambling barn which serves as a "Southern" station,
did not indicate It. And how it pouredl
Closing time for Bundey Too Late
to Classify 4 00 Saturday afternoon
Fleaae remember.
There are many other sudden changes when one boards a train
south bound from the national capital. Take the negro problem
for example.
There are more fresh, Impudent and sullen men and women.
of color in Washington, D. C, than anywhere else in the coun
try. But you don't find any of them south of Mason and Dixon,
not on a train at least. The Southern Pullman porter Is as dif
ferent from the Northern as black from white, and no "odorous"
comparisons Intended. n
None of these hook-worm victims who take five hours to make
up a car and then forget to shine the shoes, failing to smile until
the brush off period arrives! These Southern porters are on their
toes, and mind their P s and Q's, It may represent an unfortunate
racial relationship but it surely Improves the service!
The Pullman car titles change abruptly too, on our train
down we recall we were In the "Robert Toombs" next to It was
the "Joel Chandler Harris" and No. 3 was "William Bibb," a fine
type of Southern cotton planter, by the way, who used to sell
cotton yarn from his mills In Macon to the NKnltting company of
Kockford, 111.
At Montgomery, where we arrived two hours late and still
raining cats and dogs! we noticed the tallest building In sight
was the "Jefferson Davis hotel" JEFFERSON DAVIS! Grand
pappy B. regarded him with about as much affection as one of his
grand-daughtcrs-ln-law now regards the late Adolf Hitler, and un
doubtedly for a similar reason. (J. D., however, was never hung
on that "sour apple tree.")
The trip to Atlanta from Washington was very nice, quite
de luxe with a solid Pullman train, stream-lined super dicsel
engine, and arrived on the dot. But then the "West Point" R.R.
took over and the trouble started. The brakes on the diner froze
(not due to temperature which was around 60) and the only way
to get them loose apparently was to "bump" the train a post-bellum
locomotive had replaced the dicsel and for half an hour that
bumping went on all in the space; of around 15 feet. One Indignant
iHisaeiisi-r aim uiie-riscr snaving at tno time nearly cut nis nose on.
So we started half an hour late and as usual when a train
once starts lote, that Is only the beginning. We were due bere In
New Orleans at 9:30 in the evening, arrived at 12:30 the following
morning, too late to catch the S.P. train for the coast! R.W.R.
P.S. We hasten to add the late train was L. & N. NOT S.P.I
Blind Veteran Gets
Coveted Five Acres
Denver, Jan. 10 (U.R) George
Mitchell, 21-year-old war-blinded
veteran of the Normandy inva
sion, won his fight today for the
tivvacre plot near his boyhood
home where he longs to spend
the rest of his life in a world of
darkness.
Mitchell got the little tract in
a tip-and-tuck public land auc
tion.
H. G. Jaeke, president of the
Mountalr school district, drew
the Jeers of scores of sympathet
ic citizens at the auction when
he persistently outbid the sight
less army veteran.
'Better take him out of here
before be gets hurt," one spec-1
tator shouted when Jaeke raised
the bid to $5,000 one thousand
dollars an acre.
Chicago, Jan. 10 The low
spirits of the country, which
are plainly evident to a trav
eler, but not
to Washington
(see column of
yesterday) are
due to deterio
ration of goods
and services to
the public in
every phase of
living, not
merely r a i 1
road transpor
tation. A pleas-
a n t Washing
ton news stir
the relaxation
;"A A? fr
fauj alalino
was created by
of rationing on foods and now
on tires. When you read the
news In the papers, It sounded
stimulating.
But the average man cannot
obtain these simplest require
ments lor dally living anv more
than you can get adequate pub
lic transportation on trains
busses and streetcars.
This, as I reported yesterday
irom this ten-day trip, is the
cause of the evident decline in
President Truman's popularity
not the issues of his battle
with congress, not his foreign
policy, not even directly the
strikes monopolizing the front
pages.
T"EN months after the end of
Europe, and four months
after Gen. MacArthur landed in
Tokyo, public wants seem less
served In many features than
at any time during the war
You see lines of trudging, weary
housewives half a block long
outside stores. Those I saw were
seeking either nylons or butter.
The queues outside movies
sometimes extended a city block:
and I have seen people sitting
on the floor for hours In aisles
of movie theaters. Inadequate
and deficient housing troubles
millions. Go Into a restaurant
and you may find a long bill of
fare, much longer than during
the war. But Inquiry customar
ily develops that half or more
of the Items are "all out.
Bribery will get you many
things not on the counters; and
degrading bootlegging of all
short items is common. Taxi
cabs are overloaded with peo
ple and actually refused service
while empty on the streets, but
rates are higher for less service
Few people can get a hotel
room anywhere In tho central
states without waiting in the
lobbies for hours.
see
'THESE conditions are sold to
be due to shortages of equip
ment, materials, food and help
but not always, I hove found
The New Year's eve parties In
hotels In a certain city were
called off, for example, because
the waiters protested against
the hotels' selling tickets as a
cover charge without giving
them a tip on the tickets in
addition to tips on the price of
meals.
Shortages have simply en
couraged the wholesale disre
gard of the public Interest, of
service to the public, and both
managers and workers have
taken advantage of this condi
tion to a national extent. A
completely demoralized civiliza
tion has taken thorough hold on
These are the things people
e talking about, not unem
ployment compensation, the full
employment spending proposal.
fair employment practices or
the Issues which agitate the
polltlcos and the high-pressure
groups. Of two things, the pub
lic speaks to itself:
(a) Of getting that boy home
from the armed services, and
(b) of why is there no general
feeling of peace after the victory-?
On these and most of the
other Issues of the day discussed
by commentators, including my-1
self, there Is a considerable
amount of public bewilderment
To me qi.estlon B answers
question A. How can you ex
pect to get the boys home If
there Is no assured feeling of
peace? But the public does not
reason that way. Neither does
the soldier. They both see so
much Inefficiency around them,
si, much government waste and
unreasonableness, that thev at
tribute everything to those
causes.
I found myself defending Mr.
Truman eventually to practical
ly all the couple of hundred
people with whom I talked. I
found few had anything specific
in their minds against him. No
Let onr life be aa It always kaa
been.
And let as hold,
Dear wife, the names we
Esch gave each of old;
And let not time work change
Upon as two,
I still your boy friend
And still my girl friend yoa.
Glover.
e e
Who was It said:
The love of praise
How e'er concealed by art
Glows In every heart.
. Or words to that effect? Praise
as to his daily efforts is partic
ularly acceptable to a young fel
low like myself who has a fam
ily and a racing system to sup
port. It leads me to think I may
get a raise in salary. Anyway,
today a young lad of around nine
years of age who lives in our
neighborhood said to my girl
friend: "Do you know, Mrs. Dur
iing, your husband Is a very
smart man. My mama buys the
paper every morning Just to read
what he writes.
Fast Worker
How long had you known the
charming girl who became your
wife when you proposed to her?
I had known my girl friend two
years when I asked her what
she thought of the idea of us
stepping side by side along the
highway of life. Anyway, I pre
sent for your attention an ex
cerpt from a letter to a friend
written by newspaper woman
ueorgiana Campbell, who re
cently became the eighth Mrs
Tommy Manville: "I met Tommy
Manville for the first time when
Interviewed him on Oct. 11
1945. He proposed to me in the
first five minutes but I did not
take him seriously because I was
then Interested in somebody else
But shortly after I realized I
loved him and accepted his pro
posal. Tommy Is witty and
charming, very Intelligent and
terribly attractive.
Asking
Queries from clients: Q.
know what a heavyweight boxer
is, and a middleweight, welter
weight and lightweight. But
what is a cruiser weight? A.
"Cruiser weight" is the name
given by the British to the light
heavyweight class. Q. When my
wife calls her dearest feminine
friend on the phone the call
usually lasts 35 minutes. Is this
a record for that type of call?
A. Not at all, sir. In fact it is
below the average. Calls be
tween feminine "dearest friends"
usually last about 45 minutes. Q
Have a small wager that beer
was originated by the British
My opponent says the Germans
were the original beer drinkers.
A. You are both wrong. The
Egyptians were making and
drinking beer over 5,000 years
ago. Q. Before the war you were
once asked who would win the
one was bitter about him, as
many were with Mr. Roosevelt.
Most thought him a fine fellow
personally.
But they were convinced
someone would have to lay a
heavy hand upon their troubles
to cure them, and they doubted
the heaviness of his hand,
see
I TOLD them the general dis
regard of public Interests
would be cured as soon as com
petition was restored In goods
and services. But they asked me
Why not release the men
from the services, then? Why
not protect us against this kick
ing around? Why let strikes go
on when there are shortages?
I knew my replies were unsat
isfactory, because I could only
say I thought the strikes were
the mistakes of poor labor
leadership, mostly needless, and
merely manifestation of labor's
inability to handle its new re
sponsibilities to the people in
an orderly way. Truman, I said.
inherited these things, did not
originate them.
Grand National Steeplechase at
Liverpool and you answered
Royal Mail. That animal won
easily. How about the 1946
Grand National? A. Aren't you
crowding me a little mister? The
event doesn't take place until
April. However, I believe it will
be won by the Irish jumper,
Prince Regent.
Please Note
If you put the same perfume
on tnree women the scent will
differ on each one. That was
the claim of Marcel La Bour
dette of Paris, who offered to bet
he was right. Three women were
selected for the test. Seven hun
dred fifty people sniffed the
scent of the trio. They all agreed
monsieur La Bourdette was right.
The same perfume had a differ
ent scent on each of the women.
Guess I'll have to assemble three
women and a bottle of perfume
to check on this. That is, if the
editorial auditor will let me put
the perfume on my expense ac
count. Passing By
"Red" Ormsby. Former major
league umpire. The father of
13 children. Believe this is the
prolific papa record for major
league players and umpires,
Only fellow I can recall who
could even approach it was Vir
gil Garvin, once a Dodger pitch
er. Virgil was the father of eight
children. . . Lucille Ball, red-
haired Hollywoodian. About five
years ago Lucille was in an auto
mobile accident. She was so bad
ly injured she was told she prob
ably would never walk again
But Lucille courageously kept
on hoping and after three years
recovered completely and re
sumed her work as a model and
cover girl. This led to a film
career.
Snoring Cure
A Bostonian offers an addition
to the suggested cures for snor
ing as follows: "As soon as your
wife starts snoring you begin
whistling a lively tune. This will
stop her Immediately." We
would like to check this cure
with a view toward Including it
in our "snoring cure" files. So
if your wife snores tonight please
start whistling "Yankee Doodle
Dandy" or "The Indian Love
Call" and let us know what happens.
Healthy Place
A Washington subscriber who
lives on the shores of beautiful
Puget Sound says "The poor
devils who have to live in the
unhealthy climate and atmos
phere of New York city have
my sympathy." It is very nice
of him to be so sympathetic, but
it is not necessary. Statistics
prove New York is one of the
healthiest large cities of the
world. And, strange as it may
seem, the health record of the
New Yorkers is just as good as
those who live by the side of
Puget Sound.
COMMUNICATIONS
Letters to the fcdilur must Deal
the name and address il the write!
altht.ueh the use l a pen-name ul
initials tot pubnratmn is permls
-uhle rhe Mail tribune reserves
the right to edit all Idlers with a
view to clarity and cnodensaUno
ing and controlling their pro
pensitlei for harm and keeping
them in proper balance.
Our two greatest blessings,
"fire and water," when out of
control are elements of destruc
tion. Steam or electric power
must constantly be kept under
control. It is flattering for us
to say we can control the evil
forces of nature, but ourselves
we cannot control.
The big problem of humanity
is, and always has been, to or
ganize a governing power with
out itself becoming a tyrant. We
have tried kings, emperors, de
mocracy, socialism and labor
unions. The results are all alike.
Like the pet leopard with the
feeling of power and the taste of
blood, destruction begins.
Is it not a little strange that
when the wise men of all nations
met at San Francisco to plan for
peace, international law and jus
tice were never mentioned or
given any consideration, while
sovereign power was Jealously
contended for, and military pow
er carefully distributed, "deter
mined to-have peace if they had
to ngnt lor it", Pat's old theory?
The only way to stop wars is
to stop them. Destroy the tools
and prohibit anyone having any.
With the smell of blood out of
our nostrils and common sense
in use, we begin to realize that
man can be restrained in better
ways than gunpowder. In fact,
we are now demonstrating in
Japan and Germany that the
best way to curb war-like na
tions is to make it impossible for
them to prepare for war, in fact,
that is the only way it can be
done. And if that is the best
way in Germany and Japan, why
not with every nation?
If by taking the monetary sys
tem and commercial transporta
tion out of their control they can
be allowed life and the pursuit
oi Happiness, without any abil
ity to create destructive war.
that would be good medicine for
all nations. If making war im
possible is as simple as that, for
the love of humanity, let the
united Nations Economic and
Social Council" proceed at once
to organize a World service co
operation, equably participated
in by all nations.
The atomic bomb would be
safe in the hands of the Econom
ic Social Council but not in the
hands of any war making pow
er.
IRA C. JONES.
and entire
quakes.
land shaken by
Somebody stole a carbide light
from Stanley Smith's bicycle.
Henry Enders, Jr., Ashland,
named delegate to Kiwanis coat-vention.
Alumni defeats high five 23
to 18.
Sun comes out after week of
fog, and valley- rejoices.
Jackson county fair to be held
September 13-18.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
January 10, 1912
at Was Wednesday)
Socialist candidates all defeat
ed in city election.
A. H. Fisher is elected mayor
of Phoenix.
Irrigation held only hope of
valley.
QUOTATIONS
and
ANALYSIS
on Listed and
Unlisted Securities
Conrad Bruce & Co.
313 Fluhrer Bldg.
Phone 7471
Flight o Time
Medlord and Jackson Co Hit.
'ory from the files of the Mail
Tribune 10 20 and 34 years
aao
TEN YEARS AGO
January 10, 1936
(It Was Friday)
Valley rainfall above average.
House passes bonus bill.
Roosevelt sees farm relief
major problem of nation.
Continued rain. High 47, low
Husbands! Wives!
Want new Pep and Vim?
Tftotuandi of eouplt kra weak, worn-out,
D&uateu solely because body lackj Iron. Yor Dew
im, vitality, try Ostrex Tonic Tableta. Contains!
At all drug stores everywhere In
Medford, at Western Thrift Store.
Bronchial
COUGHS
(Resulting From Colds)
Buckley'! Famous "CANADIOV
Mixture Acts Like a Flash
Spend a few eenta today sal
any drug; atore for a bottle oe
Buckley's CANADIOL, Mixture
(triple acting). Take a couple oe
alps at bedtime. Feel tta Instant
rowerful effective action apreadl
hru throat, head and bronchial
tubes. It atarts at once to loosen
up thick, choklns phlegm. Booth
raw membrancea and make breath
Ins; easier.
Sufferera from thoa peralatent.
nasty Irritating cougha or bronchial
Irrltattora due to oolds And Buck
ley's brings quick and effective re
lief. Don't wait get Buckley's Can
adlol today, you get relief Instantly.
Heath's Drue Store Walnscott'a
Pharmacy Western Thrift Stores
40.
Talent district irrieatlnn re
financing loan approved by RFC.
Medford high
Salem 22 to 18,
tied eight times.
quint defeats
after score is
Horse Sense Needed
To the editor: The year 1945
will go down In history as a
threat of destruction and man's
great opportunity to build for !
permanent peace. I
The atomic bomb demon-!
strates the wisdom, if not the ;
necessity, of using good horse
sense in self preservation. All 1
creation composed, as we know, !
of conflicting forces, demon- i
strates any uncontrolled power ;
is dangerous. Man's superiority '
over other creatures is his abil
ity to utilize the .forces of na-1
ture to his advantage by regulat-
TWENTY YEARS AGO
January 10, 1926
(It Was Sunday)
Mt. Vesuvius in Italy erupts
See
Humphrey
First'1
TO BUY OR
SELL YOUR
USED CAR
Humphrey' Motors
Used Car Exchange
33 S. Riverside Ave.
For BIGGER and BETTER
sees
Maximum egg production.,
at lower cost. That's tht story
of Triangle X-tra egg pro
ducer. A carefully balanced
feed supplying the require,
menti for more extra grade
eggs. Math or pellet.
TRIANGLE X-TRA EGG PRODUCER
T I S H - U - T E X
A right worthy topper for a fashion-minded miu. This ver
satile little bumper beret boastt a broad grot-groin band
with a matching Tish-U-Tex trim. It'i very new and very gay
and u$t about at flattering at can be. Try if In any of fit
new Fall colon. Including the new Tweedy Cray.
Special 3.95
LEONS
21 North Central Avenue
Will the party who
who borrowed the
Underwood Type
writer off the 4 Vic
tory Queen' desk at
the Jackson County
Chamber of Com
merce office pi ease
return it immediately
as it was not the
property of the
Chamber and the
owner needs it bad-
ly.