Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 20, 1950, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFOHD (OREGON)
MedfordJ$$&Tribune
-Everyone in Southern Oregon"
Reads Til Mall Tribune"
Daily Except Saturday
Published by
MIDlrnan PRINTING CO.
Vt.n North Fir St . Phona a-6ia
ROBERT W RUHL, Editor
ERNEST R GILSTRA
Manaitt
hvhh nnxv Advartlslnfl Met
1 c FERGUSON, tuanegtni Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
CSnbv l GREEN Sunday Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
GERALD LATHAM Circulation May
An Independent Newipaper
Entered at. second dare matter at
Medlord. Oregon, under Act of
March 3 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
a Mail In Arivanra:
rtnll mnA Runriiuini vear....f9 00
Dally and Sunday alx months i.78
Dally and Sunday-three mos 4 40
Dally and Sunday one month 1 00
8y Carrier in Advance nwjii
Ashland, Central Point. Jacksonville
Gold Hill. PhoenU. Talent and on
Dally and Sunday one year. 12 0u
Dallv and Sunday one month 1.00
All Terma Cash In Advance
Official Paper of the City of Medford
OfllclaJ Paper of Jacksun County
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative:
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC
Offices In New York Chicago De
troit, San Francisco Los Angeles
Seattle. Portland St Louie Atlanta
Vancouver, B C
NIWSrAPII
PUBLISHER
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson Counry His
tory from the tilts at tKe Mad
Tribune 10. 20 and J4 rears sea
10 YEARS AGO TODAY
March 20. 1940
at Was Wedenaday)
Poultry plant to be erected on
McAndrews road will handle
40,000 turkeys a year.
J. H. Cochran, pioneer local
resident and insurance man,
dies at local hospital.
G. B. Poyer, Ashland, tiles
for county commissioner on
democratic ticket.
Miles Joseph Estes, 84, Civil
war veteran, dies at home of son,
Rankin Estcs, on Kings high
way. Junior high starts rehearsals
of opera cm, Doctor.
20 YEARS AGO TODAY
March 20, 1930
(It Was .Thursday)
Fish reported biting In vicin
ity of Savaga Rapids dam.
High wind sweeps valley but
no serious damage reported.
Ashland high basketball team
defeated by Astoria In state tour
nament game.
Democratic leaders of state
meet to discuss prospects In fall
elections.
34 YEARS AGO TODAY
March 20. 1916
(It Was Mondav)
Rich gold strike yielding $28!
to $15,000 a ton reported along
Birdseye creek; tungsten ore
veins found near Gold Hill.
Elmer C. Frltschle starts new
duties as rural mail carrier on
route 1.
Rise In Bear creek Indicates
more rain (ell in mountains dur
ing past 48 hours than did in
valley.
Astoria Teachers Quit
At Close Of Present Term
Astoria, Ore., Mar. 20 (U.R)
Walter Chrlstensen, principal of
A.itorla high school, and throe
city school teachers have re
signed, effective nt the end of
.the present school term.
The teachers resigning were
Mrs. Bern ice Brcnnugh, high
school English instructor; James
Peterson, Lewis and Clark junior
high physical educntlor. Instruc
tor and Margaret Moe, Lewis
ana Uhtk music instructor,
The Grange
Griffin Creak Grange
H.E.C. of Griffin Creek Orange
met at the home of Mrs. Ralph
Dillon with Mrs. Murk Slyter as
co-hostess. All who forgot their
quill blocks arc asked to bring
them to next Grange meeting,
Thursday, March 23.
This meeting will be the
Grange anniversary dinner.
Everyone is asked to brlnii a not-
luck dish and their own table
aervice. Coffee will be furnished
by H.E.C. committee. We wish to
extend a special in vitiation to all
charter members. All new mem
bers and their families are also
urged to attend.
The dance Saturday night was
very successful. A hand crochet
ed rug, furnished by Mrs. Dil
lon, was auctioned off to help
defray expenses of the lunch fur
nished by special committees
nd the H.E.C.
Subscribers
Te) resort Imnrentr ar nan
dalleer? of the Mall tribune phone
miii errors s 49 p. m. aalijr ana
11:10 a. n. Sunns?
If reiulsr delivers arrives
shortly after yea rail, please nniir
allies, thai sllntlnttlns special
Bessemer service.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Registration
Despite earlier lack
candidates, it now appears that Uregon s primary
campaign will generate considerable heat before the
ballot marking, come May
the growth in interest is found in the comprehensive
efforts being made by both parties and other groups
to boost registration.
p 0VERN0R McKAY has designated March 27 to
April 1 as Registration Week, and is urging
upon all people of the state to see to it that their vot
ing right is protected.
I JNI0N LABOR interests have launched what the
Oregon Teamster, official mouthpiece of Joint
Council No. 37 of Oregon Teamsters, describes as
"the biggest registration drive in Oregon's history
a campaign to register virtually every eligible voter
in the state.
"Non-partisan registration leagues have been
formed on county and state-wide levels with organ
ized labor groups, AFL, CIO and independent.unions
supporting and in most cases, spearheading the cam
paigns," says the union paper.
Labor, it is stated, is particularly interested in
getting out full voting strength for action on the re
apportionment issue which it is hoped to place on the
November ballot, through
i
N JACKSON COUNTY
in the May primary, especially since both parties
have full tickets with at least two hot contests prom
ised on the Republican side.
Voters have until April 18 to register. fc.ur.
Wings for Mercy
Mercy Flights, Inc.. of Jackson county, sent its
large white airplane to the North Bend airport Wed
nesday afternoon to pick up a patient who needed fast
transportation and who was unable to sit up and trav
el by conventional means.
THE PILOTS, Medford fliers who donate their time
when flying this airplane, explained that Mercy
Flights is a no-profit, volunteer organization and that
the plane was purchased by contributions from Jack
son county school children, service clubs and other
interested people.
The plane cost $3100. It is to be used for emer
gency missions only and must not compete with com
mercial services. The operating cost, actual gasoline
and oil, is figured at $12 per hour. If a patient cannot
pay this sum, he rides free. For the trip outside Jack
son county a charge of $35 per hour is made, all paid
to the owner organization. Even mechanics who work
on the plane donate their time, and free storage is
m-ovided at the Medford airoort.
The plane has a stretcher and seat for an attend
ant in addition to room for the pilots.
ess
fOOS AND CURRY counties are even more isolat
ed than Jackson county, and could well use a
service such as this. Men injured in woods accidents
who must be taken out of the county for specialized
surgical treatment, plus others too ill to travel to vet-
V.r,..;i .,lr mwl Kirn wt hi I cli m nn t a mirrrtr Ya
benefited to a trreat extent
We hone that some alert service organization or
s i j?
group oi sucn organizations
ttl'LlVllJ Villi! LUC liviu ui ?
while project for southwestern Oregon.
A Nicholt' Worth of
Comment On
By HARMAN
United Press
Washington, March 20 (U.R)
It was nice of the New York
Yankees to bring my old friend,
Dizzy Dean,
back into base
ball. For a while,
it looked as if
Deacon Brunch
Rickey of the
Brooklyn Dod-
'mm
to take the lust ,
hit of whoop-
la on
l Of OUT
nil ion n I pas
time. He tried
mil mnHiiin.
Uarman Nichols i c a 1 umpire.
Fortunately It didn't work.
Dlz Dean will work. Not too
hard, and often his back to the
audience, but he'll work.
Jerome Herman (or Hnnnal
Dean, who claims he caught the
attention of a major league scout
by hitting a jack rabbit on the
ear with a rock, will be on tele. ,
vision for the Yankees. In nihil
tlon he will do some glnd hnnd
Ing and maybe bent the hushes
between telecasts to find some
new talent for the world cham
pions. Will Add Color
At the very worst Dean will
add some color to the gnmc.
Something the game needs.
There isn't much around.
n,,t 41..,. ...... ni., .-j
Lefty Ciomez were on hand. Tha I
name of - Ruth" has enouuh of
a magnet to clog the turnstiles.
Manv was too time Hint nraiimi'
would put his hands on hips and
relax to watch a plane come
over Ihe field. He did it once
during a world scries wilh a
three-two rount on the batter.
Dean didn't go In for such
nonsense he went in for "non
sensor." as he called It.
A veteran sports editor of the
St. Louis Star-Times. Sid C.
Keener once had a man named
Med Smith traveling with the
Cards. One day Dean walked up:pPtamlan tile., hundreds of miles
to Smith and said: ' to ornament It.
Monday, March 20. ISSO
Drive On
of interest and scarcity of
19. Principal evidence of
petition.
there is increasing interest
by such a service.
e' l i. : iL.'n
sees in, to luvuKint; hub
n.p.n. in uoos ray limes
This and That
W. NICHOLS
feature Writes
"How come I ain't gettin' much
house lately?"
Smith replied that Dean had
been getting his ears boxed and
didn't deserve any house.
"Want a story. Bed?" asked
the big righthander.
"Sure."
So Dir Jumped the ball club:
took the next train back to St.
Louis. Anything to accommo-
liite a friend. The late Sam
Brcndtm fiod Dlz $.100. Maybe
'1 w,"s ";vrth becB"' J',c
" .-,111 iniuc iv. maun tin
Great One pitch
Dlz ought to be terrific on
television. He caught the public
fancy and the lie of Missouri
lenehors when he was on the air
out In St. Louis. He would say.
"There goes Whitev Kurowskl
he slud Into thlrrl." When the
teachers called him on the play
he replied: "What should I have
snid 'slidded?' " Often he
would Interrupt the flight of a
homer to go Into a nasal version
of the Wiibnsh Cannonball.
Dean Dictates
One time. Dir. sitting In the
press box in the Boston Red Sox
pnrk. got to fretting about Ted
Williams. The Cardinals were
using the T.ou Boudreau shift on
the slugger. Whltoy Kurowskl.
the third hmrm. was way
over around second, Martv Mar
Ion was half way to first.
"T.,1. l.l. 1 T-l u !.!
mivr mis uimii, Iran ?hhi
" 1 !,nd ,l"k, 1,k' Y "
on. mT T".'" ' drag hie. bones
' '." orrnniaiu aim
''mi to hunt down the
third base line '
Ted Willlnms must have read
the papers the next dav.
He sent a roller down the
third base line the first lime tin
that dav and caught the Cards
with their pants down. Ted
made it for a double.
Decorated clny ties were con
sidered so precious by the Tuni
sians that when thev remodeled
the mosque of Sldi Oqba in the
Crosstown
3.20 so
"I borrowed Jh neighbor's
spadln'
Jackson County Farm Notes
Compiled by County Office O. S. C. Extension Service
Wet Weather Good
For Planting Shrubbery
This wet weather isn't help
ing our gardens any for getting
early crops, but it is very good
weather for setting out shrubs
Many of our recently built homes
are not landscaped at all, and
there is room for improvement
in landscaping many of our old
er homes. Much of this lack) of
yard beautification Is due to
lack of confidence on the part
of the home owner that he knows
just how to proceed.
We are starting a landscap
ing project next week which we
hope will be helpful to home
owners in helping them decide
how to lay out their yards and
use shrubs to best advantage.
This project will consist of the
actual landscaping of five homes
in different sections of the coun
ty. At the lime these grounds
are landscaped, a public meeting
will be held and everyone Inter
ested is invited to come. Of
course, the people whose places
we landscape will benefit the
most, but by doing it this way
we felt that the rest of you
would not only have the benefit
of a short discussion on princi
pals of landscaping, but you
could watch the work being
done. Another advantage is that
after you have Jeft the meeting,
If you want to check up on just
what was done, you can always
drive back by the home and take
another look at the landscaping
lay out.
In order to give you the best
help possible, we have arranged
with the college to have pro
fessor I, B. Solberg come down
and landscape these yards. Mr.
Solberg was a commercial land
scape architect for years until re
cently when he retired from
business and took a teaching job
at the college.
There are two principal rea
sons for holding these demonstra
tions. One is to stimulate interest
in the improvement of home
landscaping, and the other is
to make available reliable in
formation as to how to proceed.
If this program is a sucess, then
in another year we may repeat
it using different homes and dif
ferent locations.
It Is hoped that after a period
of years a very material im
provement in the annearanee of
yards will take place. Well
groomed yards add a lot to the
satisfaction of living, and when
we live In a place which has as i
much natural beauty as the
Rogue Valley, we should do our
part to improve our own
grounds.
The five homes selected are
the Ira Burns home which Is
located on the Old Crater Lake
highway about two miles out of
Medford Just beyond the Brook-
hurst Orchard. This Is one of the
homes In the new subdivision
out there and has very little
landscaping done as yet. We will
meet there next Tuesday at 1:30
p.m. On Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
we will meet at the H. A. Wil
ham home which is four miles
beyond Brownsboro by the old
school house. On Thursday we
move over to Gold Hill and will
meet at 1:30 p.m. at the Fred
Hasse plRce. The Hasses live on
the Lower River road just across
the Rogue River from Gold Hill.
On Friday morning at 10 30 we
will meet at the James Rasmus
sen home in Valleyvlcw. Friday
afternoon we will meet at a
home in the Ashland area. This
home has not been selected as
et. Din we wiii nave an an- ;
nouncement of it later.
These homes have nil heen '
selected by a committee from
that community and they should
represent the homes In that
nrea. Everyone interested in 1
landscaping ii invited to attend .
these meetings and if you wish :
to attend more than one. that !
j will be fine too. This Is the first
time in Oregon that a program
."ucn as tins nns oeen men and
we are anxious to make it a suc
cess. Whether or not we make it
Into a permanent program will
ASPIRIN
AT
JTS
l--sa, ;-i-eJs,a.r
by row co,
WA
ft tie: ti CoMIHm Htvt r mi trial
tractor it' lots faster than
It upl"
depend largely on the interest
evidenced at these meetings.
C. B. Cordy
County Extension Agent
Horticulture
Delberi Mongold'i Jerseys
Top Herd For Month
The Jockron County Dairy
Herd Improvement association
listed for February: Delbert
Mongold's herd of 23 registered
Jerseys as the top herd for the
month. This herd produced an
average of 7(17 pounds of milk
and 48.5 pounds of butterfat.
Three cows in this herd were
dry.
The second high herd was
owned by H. C. Callihan of
Eagle Point. His herd averaged
885 pounds of milk, 42.8 pounds
of butterfat. This was a herd of
13 cows, with one cow dry.
The third place herd was
owned by Victor Birdseye of
Medford. This herd produced
an average of 704 pounds of milk
and 41.5 pounds of butterfat.
R. E. Van Dusen's herd of
Gold Hill came in fourth with
671 pounds of milk and 40.5
pounds of butterfat, and in fifth
place was Luana Farms with 572
pounds of milk and 31.4 pounds
of butterfat.
The top cow for the month was
Polly, owned by Callihan. She
produced 1,579 pounds of milk
and 91.6 pounds of butterfat.
Delbert Mongold on second
and third which produced re
spectfully 1,173 pounds of milk,
75.1 pounds of buttrfat, and
1,257 pounds of milk and 74.2
pounds of butterfat.
Lewis Clark owned fourth
place cow with 1,277 pounds of
milk and 72.8 pounds of butter
fat.
Fifth place cow was again
owned by Delbert Mongold, as
was the eighth place cow. Vic
tor Birdseye owned the cow in
sixth place, Lewis Clark's came
in seventh. H. C. Callihan owned
the cow In ninth place and the
tenth place cow was owned by
Jack Caldwell.
Each one of these cows pro
duced over 68 pounds of butter
fat. February being a short
month, these records were made
in 28 days.
Earle Jossy
County Extension Agent
COMMUNICATIONS
Letters to the Editor must bear
the nams and addresse of the writer
althoufh under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
Initial for puhllratlon ta permla
alble. Tha Mall Tribune resfrvea
the rljlil to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted foe pnb
Uranon must not exceed tfo words
G. N. Route Urged
To the Editor: I read with In
terest your ecti oria: comment ,
.'"B "l"1 .,19 ?t 0t.l-
oad's, TmcX rK S ii
,j , ' mj;i ' '
a road to Medford and on to the
coast
We used to live In Grants Tass.
once a bustling railroad town,
and traveled a lot on fine trains
both ways. There is none now
despite Ihe fact that the Siski
you line has numerous growing
principal towns.
Come to think, why not let
G. N. take over the entire Siski
you line and streamline It with
fast diesels and streamliners?
Better and faster passenger
I
service is especially needed to1 llclic n perjury, orioes ana
replace the present slow over-! 'he assistance of corrupt offi
uight single run each way. G. N. cinls.
maintains a fine fleet of trains Maier and the state govern
over the transcontinental line! '"ent turned on Hoffmeister.
nnd I would like to see them go
through vour town all the way
fron, Chicago to San Francisco,
The famed Siskivou scenic line
would undoubtedly lure many
who have never been through on
mils.
F. Drapela
Lebanon, Ore.
All may help
through your
RED CROSS
rVjblishecJ in cooperation
with the Jackson Counry
Red Cross Chapter or . .
German Officials Making Joke
Of American Purification Desires
By Lyle C. WlUon
United Press Correspondent
Stuttgart, Germany, Mar. 20
(U.R) There is a political scan
dal in this beautiful Swabian
country where German officials
are making a joke of American
desires to purify and punish
some of Hitler's old nazis.
Responsible officials believe
similar conditions exist in oth
er areas.
The situation is not good, and
at first glance it looks very bad.
But the showdown on issues now
raised will not be had soon.
Not Making Martyrs
American authorities are more
likely to take it easy for a bit
rather than crack down sharply
on balky German officials. They
are not making martyrs of them.
High policy seems to be to rier-
mit German officialdom some
leewa y on the denazification
question here for the time being,
in expectation that they will
lose out badly In the end.
Explanations why a drastic
crackdown might do more harm
than good are persuasive. But
many Germans on the snot here
do wish American authorities
would move in hard and fast on
the local German state govern
ment.
"Denazification has become a
farce in Wuerttemberg-Baden,"
one German earnestly assured
me. "This is a disagreeable pic
ture of democracy, is it not?"
another suggested.
Wuerttemberg-Baden is one of
the four states comprising the
American zone of Germany.
British, French and American
occupation authorities on Sept.
21, 1949, relinquished much of
their direct control of western
Germany, German officials and
the German people. That was
under a new occupation statute
designed to move western Ger
many rapidly toward democratic
self government.
Aimed at Press Control
Thereafter many German state
officials here and elsewhere be
gan feeling out the situation to
see how far the Americans would
let them go. Return of commun
ications facilities to German ad
ministration in the American
zone shortly was followed by
devious efforts apparently aimed
ultimately at press control.
This would have been achieved
variously by license systems or
by pooling communications fa
cilities, so the government ac
tually would be in a position to
eliminate or fatally to delay
news dispatches intended for cir
culation to the German press.
Here in Stuttgart, capital city
of Wucrttemberg - Baden, state
minister President Reinhold
Maier decided to use his new
political freedom and power "to
get over the unpopular denazi
fication as soon as possible."
Denazification is the process
by which occupation authori
ties required Germany to deal
with Hitler's old nazis.
German courts considered in
dividual cases, excused many
thousand as mere "followers" of
the nazi party and wholly exon
erated others. For those deeply
implicated In nazi policies and
brutalities there were fines, re
vocation of civil rights and seiz
ure of properties, according to
the degree of guilt.
Ministry Dissolved
Less than a fortnight after
the new occupation statute be
came effective. State President
Maier dissolved the Wuerttemberg-Baden
ministry of political
liberation, which had been re
sponsible to the state legislature
for denizification.
By Jan. 1. 1950. Maier and his
deputy, Karl Strode, had signed
ia.500 nazi pardons. It is charg
ed now that all pardon signatures
by Stroele were illegal because
the law reposes that responsibil
ity only in the state president.
In mid-October the storm be
gan to break, with complaints
to Stroele that pardons or re
ductions of penalties were for
sale by other government offi
cials. An outraged former nazi
Who had been unnhle tn hnv
his way out of trouble in that i
way finally appealed to Amer
ican authorities. His name was
Ernest Stockinger.
Maj. Gen. Charles P. Gross is
the senior American official in
Wucrttemberg - Baden. Gross
movcd fast vigorously with
to the state police to
investigate MocKinger s charges,
Th r.irmn .,i -..- .v,-
The German press and even the
public became aroused as evi
dence piled up of wholesale cor
ruption. But Maier would not
act.
Instead, he abused Grow in a ,
public statement.
i uaiKHiK mi-.
American with unwarranted in
tcrference In German affairs.
Investigating Natis
He said he was investigating a
family group of nazis who had
banded together to destroy dem-
Maier rejected all suggestions
that his deputy, Stroele. he su.v
pended pending investigation, or
otherwise dealt with.
The Americans pressed for
more action. Prosecutor General
Richard Schmid issued an order
forbidding Hoffmeister to give
any more information either to
GIVE
NOW!
PENNEY'S
the press or to American officials
in Stuttgart.
But he had turned up so much
already that indictments could
not be avoided. In a single haul
Hoffmeister obtained 500 docu
ments involving bribery of the
personnel of German denazifica
tion courts.
Prices paid for soft treatment
varied up to a bit more than
$4,000.
There is no suggestion that
Stroele took money. But he evi
dently was a key man In the
deal-softly-with-the-nazis policy
of his superior, Maier.
While the Americans kept the
pressure on, the investigation
was going high, wide and hand
some in Wuerttemberg-Baden.
But Maier took a chance, dur
ing the recent absence of high
Commissioner John J. McCloy
in the United States, and or
dered the investigation ended.
Three Germans have been In
dicted and another shortly will
be. But the indicted men were
released from jail this week.
The inquiry has come to a dead
stop.
State Police Eager
The state police are eager to
proceed. Maier's decision to end
the investigation before it was
half finished may have been
made because Chief Hoffmeister
was beginning to fire away at
Maier.
The little policeman proposed
that the immunity from investi
gation enjoyed by Maier and two
others as members of the state
legislature be waived or lifted
so he can ask some questions.
The request was ignored.
Hoffmeister wanted to ask
Maier, among other things,
about alleged irregularities in
In the Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
Back in Ohio, the other day. a
woman sent a $15 check to the
county treasurer along with a
letter explaining that years ago
she had gypped the county out
of that much and now wants to
ease her conscience.
When he took the check to
the bank, the treasurer was in
formed there wasn't sufficient
money in the lady's account to
cover it.
? ? ? T t
I wouldn't know. About the
only explanation I can think of
is that a lot of us have that kind
of consciences.
THIS-screwball-world note:
At Corcoran, down the line
in California, the other day, an
unemployed farm laborer looked
over his cupboard and found it
as bare as Mother Hubbard's. So
he took his trusty shotgun, went
out in the weeds and popped off
a cottontail rabbit, brought it
home, cooked it and fed it to his
hungry wife and child.
He was haled Into court and
sentenced to 50 days in jail for
shooting a rabbit out of season.
He pleaded guilty, but explained
that he did it to get food for his
family. Whereupon the judge re
leased him from jail, but made
it plain that he'll have to pay
a fine of $2 for each day of his
sentence, or a total of ?100.
? ? ? ? ?
I suppose such things just hap
pen.
IN OUR states, we haven't been
doing too well in the way of
enforcement of anti-gambling
laws. So. a while back, a meet
ing of good citizens was held in
Washington under the sponsor
ship of the attorney-general of
the United State and an outfit
called the Conference of Law En
forcement was organized.
Its object is to put crimp
in gambling syndicates operating
coast-to-coast and to accomplish
this the law-enforcement agen
cies of the federal government
would be called in. It sounds !
like a good idea. These big-time j
gamblers skip across state lines i
and in doing so twiddle their I
fingers at state law-enforcement j
people.
Kathryn Lazinka Named
Pendleton Rodeo Queen
Pendleton. Ore.. Mar. 20 flJ.R)
19-ycar-old. blue-eyed, red
head who halls from a 13.000 !
acre Oregon ranch, was named
queen of the 1850 Pendleton j
roundup today. i
Kathryn Lazinka. daughter of 1
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lazinka,
will hold the seat of honor at j
the annual a,Anl A,,M,,el 1A '
27. She will be attended' by four :
nnncesses, wancy uollins, Port-
land, Betty Belle Lieuallen,
Adams. Franclne Hlsler, Hepp
ner. and Shirley Warner, Milton.
Ambulance Service
' The "Black end White" Ambulance! .
I A J Retuicitator
Blood Flaim
Oxygen
MABEL CARLOS
CONGER-MORRIS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
"Preferred by so miny"
West Main at 6th fhone 3-1031
Office of the County Coroner
the denazification of Dr. Hjal-
mar Schacht, the financial gen
ius ol the Hitler regime.
Germans here say that all
Germany will be watching to see
whether McCloy will compel
Maier's government to reopen
the inquiry. McCloy li back here
now.
But it Is not so simple as that.
McCloy must avoid any pressure
on the Germans which could be
twisted by thb alert German
communists into propaganda
against the western powers. At
the same time he does not want
the Germans to get the idea
that they can ignore lawlessness
merely because they do not like
the law against which it is com
mitted. Not Regarded as Closed
McCloy's spokesman told the
United Press today that the high
commissioner certainly is not
going to reard the case as closed
and that he had not been aware
that the investigations had been
ended.
Gen.' Gross evidently would
like to see the investigation
pressed.
"Give me a couple more scan
dals like this one and the people
and press will be sufficiently
awakened so that we will have
some real democracy her e,"
Gross told me.
But he knows, too, that Maier'i
attack on him found wide pope)
ular support and that the state
firesident will make political cap
tal and a lot of votes out of
it in next November election.
The state police and other in
terested Germans frankly say
they are disappointed because
American officials have failed to
compel a full inquiry.
News
The government people aren't
bothered by state lines.
THEN somebody got scared.
How about the Saturday
night poker game at Joe's house?
Will the federals clamp down on
it like the judge down at Cor
coran clamped down on poor Joe
Doakes who went out and shot
a rabbit to make some rabbit
stew to feed his hungry wife
and child?
Again I wouldn't know.
This is getting to be a compli
cated world, and the problem of
law enforcement becomes more
intricate and difficult as the days
pass.
I ET'S close on a grim note:
- IF WAR COMES AGAIN, t
we'll all be provided with dog t
tags of a new kind. In case of
an atom bomb attack in your f.
vicinity, your tag will turn blue t
if you have been subjected to I
so much radiation that medical
treatment can't help you. If
there's a chance for you, your tag S
will be white or only faintly )
tinged with blue. f
If you're a blue-tag case, the
medics will shake their heads ;
sadly and pass on. You will bo
beyond help and it's no use wast- i
ing time on you. Attention must v
all be concentrated on the white i
and only faintly blue tag cases. I
There'sll be no romance in the I
next war. ;
"Your Office Boy'
Since 1927
DESKS FILES
SAFES
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
Across from the Rialts
Theatre,
SENATOR SPARKLE
JAIJ
If yen swing
when you walk,
quit watching
fht windshield.
"To Serve But One It
Not Our Aim.
Wo Strive to Servo,
to Serve Again"
Your Friendly Jeweler
Andy's Jewelry Shop
21 South Riverside
I
ft a nt!