Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 22, 1950, Image 6

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    pX MEDFORP (OHEGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDF0RDtf2$iWrRIBUNE
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Dally Eacapt Saturday
PublUhed by
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t C FERGUSON. Managing f-J'tol
ERIC ALLEN JR.. Clly
BARRY CHIPMAN, Telagrapn Ed toi
SENRY L GREEN Sunday Edlloi
OLIVB STARCHER Soclaty ed.wr
OERALD LATHAM. Circulation M
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Madiord. Oreson under Act 01
March 3 1887
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motor routei:
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Ofilclal Paper ol the City ot Medford
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tory (torn the (llai al the Mail
Trlbuna 10. 20 and 14 reata age
10 YEARS AGO TODAY
February 22, 1940
(It Was Thursday)
Rlggs Optical company offices
in Medford building prowled.
Jackson county contributed
$801 to March of Dimes drive.
Fourth annual Catfish derby
scheduled May 12 at Elks pic
nic grounds.
Fifty boys enrolled In physical
education at high school to put
on show tonight.
Mrs. J. C. Carr elected presi
dent of Missionary society at
Presbyterian church at Phoenix.
Dun Moon named scoutmaster
6f Boy scout Troop 14, Talent.
30 YEARS AGO TODAY
February 22, 1930
(It was Saturday;
Forty-two mile an hour gale
weeps over cily and electricity
dhut off when limbs of trees
Ihort circuit power.
Ashland high basketball team
cinches southern Oregon title by
defeating Grants Pass high 36
to 21.
vFour Nebrasknns die when
they drink anti-frecze mistaken
for wine at party.
Ashland groups approve Wash
ington school site for new coun
ty courthouse.
34 YEARS AGO TODAY
February 22, 1916
(It Was Tuesday)
George Gates and Jay Gore
Join fraternities at the Unlvcr
sity of Oregon.
Police Chief J. F. Hitlson files
fnndidncy for democratic nomi
nation as sheriff.
"Brown's" up-to-date and san
itary soda fountain, opened here
by Mr. and Mrs. Ed G. Brown.
Portland Council
Passes Ordinance
On Discrimination
Portland, Ore.. Feb. 22 U.R
The Portland city council today
passed a civil rights ordinance
which bans racial discrimination
In public places such as hotels
and restaurants.
The vote was unanimous.
The council chamber was
packed with spectators and rep
resentatives of various groups
who appeared before the coun
cil to speak for or against the
ordinance. In the audience were
whites, Negroes, Chinese, Fili
pinos, Catholics, protectants and
jews.
Both the Hotel association of
Portland and (he Oregon Res
taurant association opposed the
the ordinance.
Proponents of the ordinance
Included several civic groups,
churches and Negro and relig
ions organizations.
Walter Evans Jr. attorney rep
resenting the Hotel association,
told the council that hotel men
were opposed to discrimination
but A.'icve ,ne ordinanre was no
solurVlii to the problem.
Dead line on Clasilfled Adt: S-3U
pm for following day; in am. Mon
day noon Saturday tor Sunday ajn
Subscribers
To report Improper er notv
delivery of the Mill Tribune phone
Z'6!41 before ;& p. m. dally and
10:30 a, m. Sunday.
If regular delivery arrive!
shortly after you rail, pleaie notify
offlre, thin eliminating apeclal
messenger service.
Plane Spotters Again
Secretary of Defense
activation ot the wartime
Oregon, California and
considerable rumpus. I he principal criticism is due
to belief that the set-up would not be sufficiently
efficient, considering the speed of today's planes, to
be worth the effort. There is also much wonderment
since the powers that be in Washington have di
vulged nothing that would indicate need for such
action at this time.
Governor Douglas McKay has invited the gov
ernors of the adjoining states to send their air raid
chiefs to a meeting in Portland for discussion of the
ground warning program which Secretary Johnson
wants in operation by early April.
IT WASN'T patriotic to criticize the air raid warn
ing system as set up during the war, but there were
a number of things connected with that activity which
volunteer participants and others viewed with jaun
diced eye.
A mild form of hysteria seemed to prevail, its
chief manifestations being the desire on the part of
some to tell others what to do regardless of whether
the orders made sense or not. Another manifestation
was the anxiety of some to follow orders any orders.
The air raid warning system was part and parcel of
this war-born aberration as was also the order which
went forth for a bucket of sand and a stirrup pump
for every household. The stirrup pump manufacturers
cashed in on the latter brain storm but there its use
fulness ended.
X7E ALSO call to mind the shipment of "tin hats"
to the various municipalities, for fire wardens.
This helped the tin hat makers but just what the
wardens were supposed to do with the equipment
was never fully understood. Certainly they would
have been of little protection had a raiding plane or
planes visited the valley as the latter would have
dumped their, bombs and been gone before the ward
ens could have dug their helmets out of the closet,
donned them and gone about their work of rousing
the populace, putting out fires, etc.
Today the warning situation would be even more
confused as plane speed has been stepped up and
especially if jet planes were used they would be over
the target here, for instance, and half way to Tim
buktu before any watcher in the valley could draw
more than a couple of breaths.
Just why an enemy would want to make the long
flight to bomb inland points on the coast where there
are no strategic installations has never been ex
plained. AT LEAST 6,000 volunteers will be required to man
the state's air raid warning observation posts,
Governor McKay has estimated. Before that many
people are again subjected to the dislocations and
discomforts of airplane spotting there should be
something more than a cryptic directive from Wash
ington. E.C.F.
The American Seesaw
In the United States the economic rise, or fall,
of families and individuals conies not so much
through inheritance, and royal or political favor as in
the old countries, but more through the sagacity of
those concerned in managing their fortunes, and the
turn of business conditions and events for good or
bad.
AN EXAMPLE may be seen in the current dismantl
ing of the extravagantly lavish Chateau Caro
lands, in Hillsborough on the San Francisco penin
sula. The 96-room mansion, located in 26 acres of
formal French gardens, was built, furnished and
landscaped in 1915 at an estimated cost of $3,000,000
by Mrs. Harriet Pullman Carolan, Pullman fortune
heiress.
The lady had prepared the place to entertain
the royalty of Europe expected to visit the Panama
Pacific exposition.
There were marble baths, three-inch carpets,
silver drainboards and the upper floor had rooms
for the 40 sonants required to staff the palatial
premises.
DUT the turn of events, combined with the poor
judgment which had conceived the place, left it
unoccupied except for caretakers for most of its 35
years. First the coming of World War I dashed hopes
for any royal guests. Then came the United States'
entry into the conflict and seizure of the railroads
with an accompanying crimp in the Pullman fortune.
The mansion, closed then for the sake of econ
omy, now will give way for more plebian housing, its
1-1-carat gold bathroom fixtures and other items for
sale at bargain prices, remnants of a grandeur which
took only 35 years to fizzle out. E.C.F.
International Pancake
Race Title Goes To
Lassie In England
Liberal. Kims.. Feb. 22 0I.R
Olney, England, where Shrove
Tuesday pancake racing Is a 500'
year-old art, today won the In
ternational griddle derbv when
the best time in this southeastern
Kansas plains town fell 7.6 sec
onds behind the Olney mark.
Mrs. Dale Warden. 22. bride
of a few months, puffed down
Liberal s Main street, over the
415-yard course traditional in
Olney, in 1 minute 18 seconds.
But five hours earlier. In Ol
ney, lR year old Florence Callow
made the distance flipping her
pancane three times while rac
ing in 1 minute 10 2 '5 seconds
That made Florence the win
ner of the first international pan
cake race.
Dead line Sunday Claullltd ll al
Noon Saturdays.
Wednesday. February 22, 1950
Johnson's request for re
air raid warning system in
Washington has kicked up
Reg Tag Sale Slated
Friday And Saturday
Offering many values espec
ially purchased for the event.
Medford merchants will sponsor
another city wide Red Tag sale.
Friday and Saturday.
Food stores as well as all oth
er businesses have been urge!
to cooperate In the bargain days
according to Robert Agard
chairman of the merchants com
mittee of the chamber of com
merce.
Cb?P C.hllrn'i
'nil 0p .....jf.... Aipim
. HIASANT TAST1NO
. ORANOI FLA VOI ID
J. NO NIID TO CUT I ST.JO SEfri J
O IRIAK TAIUTS
. ACCUIlAn DOSAOI
Metheri
Are Atkina For
I tSFItll I
Crossfown
y rTaf v.. n
"I brought my Boy scout axe. Y'can't cut a cherry traa
down with that cardboard axe you gave me!"
On the Side- E v Dur'
(Distributad by Kino, Taaruraa Syndicate, Inc.)
Love tormrnti me once afaln
Sueetly-hltler, ladly-drar,
Hindi me with a rosy chain
Hard 10 break, and hard Lo brar.
Arnold.
As for astrology, I don't go for
it at all myself. However 1 have
done some extensive cheeking
on the stargazers and so the
clientele continue to query me
about the subject. If you are in
terested in astrology, why not
do some checking yourself. For
example, take Margaret Truman,
the president's daughter, born
on February 17 under sign of
Aquarius. There are more people
in the Hall of Fame born under
that sign than any other. I don't
think Maggie is going to make
the Hall of Fame but she sure is
getting a lot of publicity. Mar
lene Dietrich is an Aquarian. Do
you see any resemblance be
tween Miss Truman and Mnr-
lene? Aquarius women, say the
stargazers, despise housework. I
don't know whether this fits
Maggie Truman or not. Aqua
rian women "dislike poverty."
That's what the stargazers say.
What woman doesn t; Quaint
fellows, those stargazers. The
analysis of Miss Truman accord
ing to what the astrologers claim
will be continued in a later issue.
Gat It Right
The Boy Scouts of America
has officially announced that this
years is the organization's 40th
anniversary. You would think
they would know. However, cer
tain residents of Monterey, Cal.,
say this is the 42nd anniversary
of the Boy Scouts of America.
And what's more they can prove
it. They say the first troop of
Bov scouts was formed in Mon
terey, Cal., in 1HU8 by Gen. R. I.
Bullard who had previously met
Baden-Powell in England. They
also state the country's first
scoutmaster was Bill Potlharst
of Monterey.
Overlooked
No winner of the Santa Anita
Derby ever won the Kentucky
Derby. That's what many sports
scribes, including my distin
guished colleague Bill Comm.
continue to state. The observa
tion is intended to convey the
thought that the California clas
sic is not In the same class as
Kentucky's run for the rose. I
would like to call something to
the attention of the aforemen
tioned sporlscribcs. The Ken
tucky Derby of 1940 was won by
Gallahadion. Well, gentlemen,
dallahadion ran in the Santa
Anita Derby of 1940 and could
not even finish in the money.
Advice
A girl's best friend may be
her mother but she usually gets
the best advice from her father.
Take Yolanda Donlan, for ex
ample. Yolanda was born and
reared in Hollywood, Cal. She
wanted to be an actress. Her fa
ther. Jimmy Donlan, the well
known comedian, said 1 0 his
(laughter; "If you want to be
come a great actress get out of
Hollywood." Strange sounding
advice, what? But Jimmy rea
soned with his daughter that le
gitimate stage theaters were
Get These
Oregon Finance
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monthly payment date and amount . . .
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I.IIIIIIIIIIIMI.IUIII.
scarce in Hollywood, the chances
of good sound training for a
young actress' slim. Anyway,
Yolanda took her father's ad
vice. She got a job as an under
study in "Born Yesterday," at
tracted the attention of Garson
Kanin who recommended her
for the featured part in the Lon
don production. And so, Miss
Donlan, born in Hollywood, first
achieved fame in Britain and is
now one of London's leading
stage and screen actresses,
Over There
As to what is the most popu
lar alcoholic drink in Norway,
I have not been definitely, in
formed. I believe, however, it is
gin. In Norway the liquor indus
try is state controlled. Places
where strong drink is sold are
strictly limited. In fact there are
only 52 liquor shops in all Nor
way. Also only 64 restaurants
in that country where the strong
er alcoholic drinks are served.
It is also necessary for a Nor
wegian citizen to have a drink
ing license. That is. a license
which permits him or her to buy
a drink. It is about five times
as hard for a Norwegian woman
to get a drinking license as it is
a man.
New York City certainly has
quite a few colleges for dogs.
Today I noted at Third avenue
and 18th street. Manhattan, a
dog school called Canine college.
Maybe these dog colleges should
meet in some sort of athletic
competition. Then the dogs on
these teams could wear sweaters
or coats bearing their varsity
letter.
Many Tools, Ingenuity
Used In Jail Escape
Lebanon, Mo., Feb. 22 (U.R)
A Laclede county jail inmate
used a stove poker, a can opener,
a length of rope and a good deal
of ingenuity to escape during the
night.
Carl Clell Perry, 59, in jail on
a theft charge, jabbed a hole in
the brick wall and went down a
rope from the top floor.
Perry was being held for Na
tional City. Cat., authorities on
a charge of forgery.
H. L. Mounteer, a National
City police officer, arrived to
day in time to join the search
for Perry.
Neil Brown, Laclede county
sheriff, said he didn't know how
Perry obtained the rope. Perry
was the only prisoner in the jail.
Medford Union Man
Named To Council
Portland, Feb. 22 Don Stan
sell, Medford, secretary of local
No. 962, teamsters, chauffeurs
and helpers union, was elected
trustee of the joint council of
teamsters here recently
Phil Brady, long-time team
ster leader and state legislator,
was reelected president of the
council.
STAN STARK
Yai Man
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
A dispatch from Washington
this week says there is "increas
Ino tallr in congress that the gov
ernment may have to seize the
mines in a new etiort to ena ine
coal strike."
n ehnuM v,a nHHpH that there
has been considerable talk from
the miners side that it tne gov
ernment seizes the mines it must
h a COMPLETE seizure that
im...jfiTv,rrt man muct mn them
and the government must keep
any proms arising out m men
operation,
I THINK this is the time for us
us to remember that if, as and
socialism comes to our country
that is how it will come. Our
politicians will bungle along with
some situation like the coal
strike until it becomes EXPLO
SIVE as the coal strike already
is.
Eventually things will get so
bad that seizure of the affected
industry by the government will
be the easiest way out.
ALREADY we have established
a pattern of government seiz
ure in such cases. The govern
ment takes over in a crisis. It
leaves management of the seized
industry in the owners' hands.
The government merely uses its
temporary "ownership" as a de
vice to end the strike that caused
the crisis. When the crisis ends
and the strikers go back to work,
the industry is handed back to
its owners.
Labor is coming to regard that
pattern as a GYP. Hence the talk
from labor's side that THIS
TIME it must be a complete
seizure and that the government
must keep the profits, if any,
arising out of operation.
FROM that, it is only a step to
RETAINING the seized in
dustry as a government-owned
monopoly. Whenever that pro
cess begins, socialism will be
here.
THERE is increasing talk in
congress those davs about
WHAT TO DO TO HELP
SMALL BUSINESS. One senator
says: "Everybody wants to help
the little business man, but we
can't seem to agree on how to
do it."
AS ONE small business, that
that kind of talk scares me.
If the politicians ever get their
clutches on small business, it
will be just too bad for small
business men. Look at the poor
devils of potato farmers the
country over. They got into the
clutches of the politicians. The
ensuing mess is something fear
ful to contemplate. I find an
increasing number of potato
farmers coming to the grim con
clusion that the only way to
save their industry, to which
most of them have devoted the
bulk of their working lives, is
to get it out of the hands of the
politicians and hoe their own
row from "here on out no mat
ter what it costs in the way of
loss of "parities" and subsidies.
IF SMALL business ever gets
to feeling sorrv for itself and
starts running to the government
for "help." the day of successful
small business will have come to
an end.
The heln that Doliticians give
to business in such cases is the
KISS OF DEATH.
The Grange
Central Point Grangt
Central Point John Day
showed pictures of a trip to Yu
kon to a large crowd of Grang
ers and friends, on February 17.
Regular business meeting fol
lowed the pictures. The men had
a real display of guns and am
munition. The ladies also had a
display of ammunition used to
get a man, which consisted of
powder, lipstick, rouge and a
rolling pin.
It was decided to have a pot-
luck dinner preceding the spe
cial meeting on March 7. when
a large class will be initiated in
first and second degrees. Special
guests for the evening were Mas
ter Paul Force of Eagle Point
and State Deputy Wm. Howes
and Mrs. Howes of Medford. Re
freshments were served by Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Birdseye and
committee.
Dead line on Classified Ads:
S:30 pm for following day. 10 a m
Monday lor Monday; noon saiuraay
for Sunday a.m.
BEFORE YOU RENEW
INVESTIGATE
FARMERS MONEY SAVING PLAN
Over 00,000 satisfied policyholders . . .
twenty years of service and stability . . .
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with no mileage reitrietions. Compare this
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Bod.ly lnury V I I V ,,, Nm
$5,000 Property Recurring. Policy Fee
Damage Liability "J""
20 DISCOUNT TO RANCHERS & FARMERS
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j 'AtMED! TVsK
A. JiNsutuacf 3v
Editorial Comment
WHO WOULD RESTORE ITf
If the beauty and recreational
utility of the Rogue are destroy
ed by the ill-advised Rogue riv
er project, beaucratic in concept
and alike economically and ethi
cally unjustifiable, who will re
store that which shall have been
destroyed b&yond restoration?
The present will stand con
demned in a court of future
opinion of illogic and waste.
Such reflections arise when
one considers the case of D. H.
Barber of Trail, president of the
Preserve the Rogue association,
recently made for an unshackled
river before the Portland chap
ter of the Izaak Walton league.
He set forth that contemplated
dams would decrease the pres
ent income from sports fishing
by $809,000 a year, representing
a capitalization at 3 per cent of
$20,966.000 and this in an era
when there is neither shortage
of power nor of agricultura
products. He cited the doubtful
benefits of flood control, and
the disadvantageous ratio of Irri
gation returns.
"All this is for 1000 new
farms," he said, "to raise pears
that already are a burden on the
taxpayer, or other crops to com
pete with other farms on a rapid
ly lowering farm market. Are
we going to continue to be fools
enough to pay too much to irri
gate new land, and then pay out
more for subsidies on the addi;
tional crops the land produces?
An attempt has been made, by
those who wish to shackle the
Rogue, to represent that all who
oppose the dams arc unprogres
sivc. But if that which the pro
ponents intend is progress, then
with alacrity we shall accept the
contrary epithet and wear it with
pride. This newspaper rejoices
that many residents of the Rogue
river vallev have banded togeth
er to defend their invaluable
God-given inheritance, but it
wishes that Oregon residents
elsewhere would enlist more
actively in the cause. It is their
river, too, for it belongs to the
people. And once destroyed, as
a free river, it could not be re
stored, though penitence and
regret would be certain to fol
low. The Oregonian.
COMMUNICATIONS
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and addreste of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
Initial for publication Is permis
sible. The Mall Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
licatlon must not exceed 400 words
Brotherhood Week
To the Editor: Each year, for
several years, in February, it
has been the custom to celebrate
Brotherhood Week. Certain men
of vision planned a week during
which time Americans would
strive to work together for the
common good. '
The Jew, the Protestant and
the Catholic were to form a nuc
leus of brotherly conduct, with
feeling, thought and action, com
bined to foster understanding
and good will.
If we are to have a United
Nations, living in the harmony
of a united world, we must pre
pare in just such ways as this to
make the ideal a living thing in
all we think and say and do.
The United Nations must rep
resent united races, united
creeds, united arts and sciences.
The separate and independent
segments must yield to a great
and perfect whole; a whole to
which each part contributes
wisely, not losing identity, but
relating to a concept larger than
that of the private home, the
community, the state, or even the
nation.
Each who celebrates Brother
hood Week, whatever the time
or the season adds by so much
to the fulfillment of an eternal
and worthy dream: the dream of
peace.
One spirit animates all re
ligions, though the truth is ex
pressed in many ways. So men
too. though of many races are
united in the human race. They
are inter-related by the creed of
love.
"Thou shalt love thy neighbor
as thyself" is one of the most
important commandments ever
given. The world is a family;
humanity is one; and each who
lives can draw from the richness
of the whole.
Mrs. Lillian Kendall, President
Medford Theosophical Society
R. C. Bearty, Dist. Agent
Hugh Hamlin, Local Agent
204 W. Main Phone 2-7157
WEATHER
By United Press
Northern California Fair to
day, tonight and Thursday.
Slightly warmer today except on
north coast. Northwest winds
10-20 mph off coast, except
southerly Eureka northward.
OUCHI
Hollywood, Feb. 22 (U.R)
Actress Arlene Dahl was recov
ering today after the removal of
40 cactus needles. Miss Dahl
accidentally sat on a cactus bed
when she was thrown by a horse
near Palm Springs, Cal.
MEDFORD
PHARMACY
127 E. 6th
Just Off Central
9 A.M. - 10 30 P.M.
For Complete
Prescription Service
DAY
and
Night
Call
2-6253
If No Answer Call
2-8582
Prompt Free Delivery
Baby Needs
Sick Room Supplies
Rentals
JIM GORDON
Bidgood Hudson
Medtord's Own Modern
Pharmacy
LOANS
Start the New Year with a
clean slate. Pay those Holi
day bills with cash. Loans on
your salary, furniture or
automobile. With payments
to fit your income.
Loans from $50 to $500
On Your
Salary, Furniturt or Automoblla
Up to 24 Months ta Rapay
SEI
AMERICAN
FINANCE
CORPORATION
Room 210-211 Leveratt Bldg.
Ucensa M-362 Licanaa S-285
PHONE 2-8886
RENT A CAR
Daily's U-Drive
and
BODY and PAINT SHOP
Southern Orenon's Oldest
and Finest
29 So. Bartlett
Medford
DROP HEAD COLD
aSyyyTzvyaS'
2 drops of Penetro Nose Dropi 0
in each nostril, cool, shrink A
open stuffy nose. You breathe W
easier quickly this 2-drop way.
PtNtTRO NOSE DROPS
Better Cough Relief
When new drugs or old fail to stop
your cold don't delay. Safe, depend
able Crcomulsitjfi goes quickly to the
seat of the trouble to relieve acute
bronchitis or chest colds. Creomulsion
has stood the test of more than 30
years and millions of users. It contains
safe, proven ingredients, no narcotics
and is fine for children. Ask your
druggist for Creomulsion and take it
promptly according to directions.
CREOMULSION
Rtlievet Coughs Chest Colds Ironchitb
HEART ATTACK OR
INDIGESTION?
THANK HEAVENS1 Most attacks are Just acid
Indigestion. When tt strikes, take Bcll-ans
tablets. They contain the fastest-acting
heartburn, gas and similar distress. 25.
PiLES
HEMORRHOIDS
and fllh.i R.ctal Dilord.n
COLON ..STOMACH
RUPTURE (Htrnio)
TmM Witkeit Hesiitat Oil nth i
lOtM until 5 00 Man IK.an.l. P.l
Until ;00 o m Mon.Wd Frl. CJ.Ora.HH
free Ksrar ssss
THE DEAN CLINIC
IN OUR 40th YIAR
N.I. Corner I. Burmid on4 Grand A.
TtLphon CAit 3918 Portland 14, Or.
Fiery, Smarting Itch
of Common Skin Rashes
Don't stand such torment another hour I
Just smooth Resinol Ointment on your
irritated akin at once See how quickly
its medically proven injtreHtenta in lan
olin bring biissiul, long-lasting relief-
i