TEN MEOFORO (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Tuesday, April it. 1SS0
Medfoi
.Tribune
"Everyone la Southern Orf on"
Reads The Mall Tribune"
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Published by
MSD1-ORD PR1NT1NO CO.
37-39 North rir St Pbona 3-t4l
ROBERT W RUHL. Cdltor
ERNEST B GILSTBAF
HERB GREY. Advertlsina Mar
& C fERGUSON. Mansglni Editat
ERIC ALLEN JR., Cltt Edltol
HARRV CUIPMAN. TalHraDO Ed
HENRY L. GREEN Sunday Edltn
niJVK ST ARCHER Society Edltot
GERALD LATHAM Circulation MtT
An Independent Newspaper
Entered aa aecond elaae matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 1. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford anal Jaeksaei Ceeary Hhv
lory from the files ef rite MaH
Tribeae 10. 20 sad 14 run fe
10 YEARS AOO TODAY
April 25, 1940
at wag Thursday)
Large buck deer evidently
driven out of hills by dogs, seen
galloping down Lincoln street
here.
Mrs. Sue Clayton, Talent, re
calls caring for Union wounded
during civil war.
Registration of Ashland voters
shows 2,543, an increase of 192
from 1938.
Medford Hl-Timeg wins second
honor in national rating.
Hugh Powers wins first place
in model airplane contest.
20 YEARS AGO TODAY
April 25. 1930
(It Was Friday)
R. R. Harwood, Medford, ap
pointed chairman of commercial
division of Southern Oregon
Photographers' association.
Gov. A. W. Norblad to be prin
cipal speaker at Ashland's
Fourth of July celebration.
Large group sees clearing of
road from Annie spring to park
headquarters and brisk snowstorm.
Darwin K. Burgher, ex-Idaho
grid ace, seeks coaohing position
at Medford high.
34 YEARS AGO TODAY
Wednesday Study club to meet
with Mrs. M. I. Afford.
Woodmen of World to Initiate
class of 73 at meeting here.
High school senior class to
present play "Merely Mary Ann"
at Page theater.
COMMUNICATIONS
Lstters to the Editor mult bear
the name and addresee of the wrltei
Blthoush under certain circum
stances the use of a pan nsms oi
tnltlsl for publlcstlon Is permls
slbls. The Mall Tribune reserves
the right to edit sll letters with s
view to clarification and conden
sstton. Letters submitted for pub
Hratlon must not sacsed S0 words
Why Kid Ourselves
To the Editor: 1 guess it's all
right for people who can't get
up in the morning of their own
accord to kid themselves into
thinking they are getting up an
hour later than they really are:
but why can't they wnlt to set
the clocks ahead until after
school is out?
Country children who have to
get up at the crack of dawn to
catch a school bug at 7:30 a.m.
will now have to catch one at
6:30 actually by sun time. And
it is no use to try to get them to
bed early to make up for it.
If you have never tried to put
chickens to roost or children to
bed while it's still daylight you
ought to try it some time. You
can't fool cither one. They know
when it's dark enough to go to
sleep.
Why can't the merchants open
their stores from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
during the summer instead of
tampering with the clocks? It
would be no more of a hardship
on anyone than daylight saving
time will be.
At least we should bo allowed
to vote on it. Remember the
farmers In Jackson county keep
the merchants in business.
Luc lie Hayes Scott
Detention Home Urged
To the editor: We are hearing
a great deal about the need to
clean up Front street and about
our Juvenile "delinquents." That
word, "delinquent, should be
reserved for the parents who fre
quent such places as are found
on Front street and elsewhere.
The problem of most import-
New York, N. Y., April 22 Something new over television
Dizzy Dean broadcasting the New York Yankee ball team in ac
tion. According to the sport writers "Dizzy" gets $30,000 for the
season, which is around ten times as much as he got when he start
ed to pitch in the big league.
Pretty soft.
Dizzy is merely doing what he likes best to do, and doing It
as he wants to do it NATURALLY. Which means he talks plain
Arkansawese which isn't English. Or at least not the King's Eng
lish or Harry Truman's either. It's "Dizzy" English.
And judging by the group at the television set the fans eat It
up. The more ine uiz muraers ine jiing s cngusn xne oeuer
they like it and the better Diz does, too. He had a wonderful time
and was paid for it.
So a fine time was had bv all by all the Yankees and their
fans, that is. Your correspondent, who isn t, enjoyed the game for
seven innings, when with the New Yorkers leading 7 to 2, Wash
ington knocked out Tommy Byrne and tied the score.
But as usual, the Yanks came back in the fatal eighth with
three runs and four more in the ninth, to put the game on ice, 14
to 7. If this keeps up the Yanks will be so far out in front by the
Fourth of July, that even G. T. won't bet against them.
Oh well, the other New York ball club the Giants were
slaughtered by Brooklyn at the latter's "flag-raising" so there was
some consolation. The Giants, in fact, haven't won a game yet. Not
many years ago they were as consistent pennant-winners as the
unsinkable Yanks.
Another ray of sunshine. The two major leagues are (as of
today) led by Chicago for the National and Detroit for the Amer
ican. Even more sensational, second in the American are the St.
Louis BROWNS; not so sensational but equally gratifying: second
in the National, the Boston Braves. Let the good work go on but
of course, it won t.
Unfortunately there was no television of the Budenz hearing
in Washington as there was of Lattimore's first appearance. As a
result, the net score was confusion, except, of course, for the Dro-
McCarthyites and the antis like all extremists, they stayed
where they were.
Budenz, former communist editor oi tne uany worker" got
religion and was the principal witness against the II Communists
who were convicted last fall and are awaiting the result of their
appeal. He is anotner extremist went an out tor communism and
now is all-out against it. However, ne is, we Deiieve, a lainy trust
worthy witness. What he said about Lattimore may not be true,
but we have no doubt Budenz BELIEVES it Is true. We can't go
along with those who claim once a Communist always a liar
there are exceptions like Whittaker Chambers and Budenz.
The Herald-Tribune this morning summed up the Budenz sit
uation pretty well as follows, quote:
Mr. Louis Budenz's testimony before the Tydings sub
committee on Thursday is obviously of first importance. It
represents the first concrete and testable evidence in sup
port of Senator McCarthy's allegations of Communist infil
tration of the State Department to be placed upon the record
in the two months since the Senator launched his campaign.
As such, it does not go very far and even so far as it goes is
not, of course, conclusive. It affects the State Department
only as it concerns Mr. Owen Lattimore, who was never a
regular officer of the department, and it' affects Mr. Latti
more only by hearsay. Mr. Budenz alleges only that he was
TOLD by Communist leaders that they regarded Mr. Latti
more as if he were a Communist. Mr. Lattimore has testi
fied under oath that he never was a Communist nor deliber
ately served Communist ends; he obviously has a right to
be heard in reply to the Budenz statements and it would be
improper to draw any conclusions until all sides have been
placed upon the record.
That seems to the writer a pretty sensible viewpoint. "don't
shoot until you see the whites of their eyes."
Meanwhile one can't blame Lattimore for joining the radio
audience in the general confusion for:
Here is McCarthy claiming Lattimore "a leading Soviet spy
In the State Department," and still having a dssk there, while
the facts are he was never an employee and never had a desk, but
only worked two or three weeks on a special assignment.
Moreover, Budenz denies Lattimore was ever the "leading
Soviet spy," does not claim he was a Communist, but maintains he
was a member of a Communist cell in the Institute of Public Relations.
Wherefore, McCarthy insists that Lattimore IS a Communist
because he always followed the Moscow line regardins China,
Budenz concedes that Lattimore did not ALWAYS follow the
Moscow line but denies this is any evidence he (Lattimore) was
NOT a member of the porty-cell, because this course was often fol
lowed by top "Reds," on advice from Moscow so as to allay suspic
ion. In other words there is no escape. If you follow the Moscow
line you ARE a Communist, and if you don't follow it well that
is no evidence you AREN'TI
However, as the Herald-Tribune remarks, the Budenz testi
mony is important and also is first blood for the Wisconsin senator
since he started his crusade. Had this blown ur in Joe's face he
would have been all through: as it didn't well the merry chase
will go on and on, until the clean-up.
a a
Incidentally if the chief count against Lattimore is his Chinese
policy, then he has plenty of company. The latest recruit on this
issue is the well known expert on the Far East and professor of
international relations at Columbia U., Nathaniel Peffer. In an
article in the April Harpers entitled "China in the Long Haul" the
author agrees with Dr. Lattimore regarding China and Chiang
Kai-shek. He maintains that because of Chiang's switch from left
to right, his ineptitude, his refusal to grant necessary reforms, and
the corruption of his machine there was NO POSSIBLE CHANCE
of saving his regime from the fate It suffered, short of an all-out
American military intervention and there was, and still is, no
popular support in this country for that.
We wonder how long it will be before the Wisconsin senator
brands Professor Peffer as another "fellow traveler!"
e
It was predicted in this department some time ago that event
ually McCarthy would come ftice-to-face with General Marshall,
who was responsible for the non-intervention policy in China
which McCarthy so viciously condemns as pro-Russian. In his
speech to the United States Newspaper Editors in Washington, we
note he called General Marshall "completely unfit," incompetent
and "pathetic," adding for good measure that Secretary of State
Acheson is also "completely incompetent."
Imagine a third-rater like McCarthy having the gall and brazen
effrontery to belittle men of the high minded, statesmanlike type of
Marshall and Acheson men, who regardless of political partisan
ship, will rank abong the genuinely great figures of the present
Seneratlonl We wish the sub-committee would call in General
larshall to give them HIS opinion of McCarthy.
e e e e
It Is amazing how backward that Gay Debutante "Spring" Is
about coming forward. The skies were clear today and Saturday
being a half-holidny to all and a complete holiday to many. Central
Park was crowded. We strolled across to Central Park west along
72nd street and here is something for the book (mark this R. S.!)
We did not hear a WORD of English spoken en route. There
were hundreds of pedestrians, scores of conversotlonal groups; we
recognized French, Spanish and German, suspected Russian and
Czech, but we repeat not a WORD of English! Surely Greater
New York Is still the Melting Pot of the World and some have
an extremely HIGH melting point!
Rut the point we started out to make was this there were
crowds, the sun was shining, but there was no "Spring" in the air
it was cold, windy and unpleasant! R.W.R.
ance Is the long range one of
caring for our young people now
so that places like Front street's
taverns will be closed through
lark of patronage instead of
court orders.
The great need here is a de
tention home where youngsters
running afoul of the law may
slay until their cases come up
In court. They have to await
their turns in court the same as
anyone else and during the de
lay there is no place but jail for
those over 14 and no place but
their own contaminated homes
for those under 14.
Some of these homes are un
safe to leave a small child. They
may be without heat and food
and may harbor drunken or hos
tile parents wjio are a danger to
the child. Sounds improbable?
There are many such cases on
record.
The 14-year-old may be con
fined to a cell in our very good
Jail (for adults) but mrnlnl scars
he may develop from the experi
ence are worse than anv physi
cal blows. Can you imagine your
own son or daughter in a cell
with other like offenders of their
own age with nothing to do all
day but lit and compare escap-
"Yes. I called for a repairman. I'd like you to take out the bell and
put in emmes.
Letter From Washington
y HARRIS ULSWORTH
Member ef Cone re as From Oregon
Debate on the "one-package"
appropriation bill goes on. Here
tofore annual appropriations
have been made in separate bills
for the several departments. This
time all the money requested by
the president in his budget is put
before the house in one huge
bill, 431 pages long.
Votes on the first amendments
offered by republicans, though
close in count, indicated pretty
clearly that the majority side
of the house will pretty general
ly go along with the president's
spending ideas. The economy
amendments were voted down.
Meanwhile, Senator George,
soeaking as chairman of the
joint committee on taxation, says
the deiicit tor laou win ue ?u.i
billions instead of the $6.5 esti
mated by the president in his
budget message. He also esti
mates that the deficit for 1951
will mount to $7.3 billions for
that year in the face of the presi
dent's prediction of a deficit of
$5.1 billions. In other words, he
rates the Truman guess as be
ing just about 50 per cent wrong
for 1951. Either way the mount
ing deficit (without any compel
ling emergency) is more than
even our great government can
stand for long. I have repeated
ly pointed out that on the basis
of Truman's estimate we are run
ning in the red at me iw
$16 million per day. that figure
according to Senator Georges
statement, should be revised up
ward to more than $20 million.
ON AUGUST 18 last year I
addressed the house on i the suo-
iect of tne tragic, " ,""'. J
blunders we made in "-
Here are some paraxon""
thut speech:
"So far as tne power ui m
atomic bomb is concerned I
say with all seriousness that
in the eventual balancing of
accounts the fall of China may
prove to be more decisive than
the atomic bomb.
"There are many shrouded
mysteries as to exactly what
happened to China and as to
exactly why it has fallen into
the hands of organized com
munism. In the white paper
the fact is excused but the
mysteries are not explained.
Thai inienipnt was made
ioht months aeo. We have late
ly been so preoccupied with war
threats ano events in
that most people have overlook
ed the more important activities
the far-eastern ring oi me
umrlri cirrus. We have not Vei
been told why that drama ended
as it did with the lall oi t-nina
to the communists.
One thing likely will be es
tablished by the present senate
committee investigation of com
munist leanings of people con
nortari with the state depart
ment. The finger of well-founded
suspicion of communist sym
nnl hv If not worse, is going to
be pointed at certain individuals
who had a great ocai to no wmi
shaping our China policy. This,
at least, will serve the purpose
of partly explaining the mystery
DON'T TOUCH
Boston (U.R The trailing ar-
butus, or mayflower, is the offi
cial state flower in Macsachu
setts. But don't try to pick one.
There's a $50 fine for anyone
who does.
as to why our government did
what it did in China. That story
is too long to tell here but 1
shall be glad to send a copy of
my speech, in which it is related
in detail, to anyone who wants
it.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Td like to offer for your
thoughful consideration today a
recent exchange of political
statements between Howard
Morgan, of Monmouth, a former
Oregon state representative, and
Oregon State Senator Tom Ma
honey, of Portland.
In Monmouth the .other day
Morgan charged that Oregon
State Treasurer Walter J. Pear
son, who is running for the Dem
ocratic nomination for governor,
is being supported by "the John
Hall wing of the Republican
party and the Tom Mahoney
wing of the Democratic party."
That brought from Mahoney
in Portland the following blast:
"Former Governor Hall and my
self have never discussed at any
time or in any manner the cur
rent governorship campaign. We
have never acted together in any
way, shape or manner concern
ing mat or any omer campaign.
D LIKE to ask you this ques
tion:
Do you believe a word
EITHER of them says?
I don t. I simDly assume thai
they are talking for purely po
litical purposes ano let go
that. I imagine you leei mum
the same way about it.
JET'S go on from there.
I'm not n Dolitician. and I
insist on having nothing to do
with politics from the inside
lnokine out. Whatever contact I
have with politics and politicians
is from the outside looKing in.
So it happens that I am not per
sonally acauainted with either
Morgan or Mahoney. All I know
about them is what I read in the
papers and hear from other peo
ple. But I have the feeling that AS
INDIVIDUALS both Mr. Ma
honey and Mr. Morgan are quite
all right. I imagine that in their
.... AROUND HOLLYWOOD
S, VIRGINIA MacPHERSON
Uarted Press Cowaipowdart
Vlrgtnl
tbcPhereea
Hollywood. Apr. 25 U.R
Disc Jockey Al Harvis claimed
the title of the bravest man in
television t o
day. He took a
1 i e detector
test while read
ing a commer
cial. And he was
n't fired.
Jarvis did it
as a dare after
a skeptic crack
ed he didn't be
lieve one man
could read a
hundred com
mercials dur
ing the day and really mean all
those fancy phrases.
Parvis said he could and of
fered to prove it. Well, one thing
led to another, and quicker'n he
could say "double your money
back," there he was, hooked up
to this lie detector.
"Oak Burger, a sergeant in the
local police crime lab. worked
the test," Jarvis explained. "We
picked out a wine commercial.
And right there we ran into
trouble."
Milk Strongest Drink
Seems Jarvis is a man afflict
ed with "butterflies with bayo
nets" (ulcers to you). Doesn't
drink anything stronger than
milk.
"So I couldn't get up there
and say this was the most sen
sational wine I've ever tasted,"
he said. "We had to re-word the
questions to read: 'If vou DID
drink would this be the most
sensational wine?"
Jarvis said it sure would.
Buddy, and the little needle on
the lie detector clicked steadily
along. (If he'd been fibbing it
would've started hopping up and
down all over the place.)
"Just In a day's work," said
Jarvis airily, "hy, the other day
I even let a policeman shoot a
cigar out of my mouth. Not just
any cop. Honey. This was one of
the boys from the local pistol
team."
He's on Radio. Toe
This is the kind of stuff Jar
vis turns loose on his television
program. Does it five hours a
day six days a week.
And everybody except Jarvis 1
is still trying to figure out what I
ne nopes to prove with a mara
thon like this.
"Simply that I have formu
la for a show that's going to be
the greatest thing in television,"
he says. "Strictly an ad lib deal.
Anything'g liable to happen. And
often does. Nobody knows what
to expect ... not even me."
Half a dozen guest stars wan
der in and out of the show while
Jarvis chats with his secretary,
olays records, eats his lunch,
shaves off his beard, plays cards,
or goes through any other antic
that may strike him at the moment.
It's hectic and confusing and
noisy. But it sells things. Jarvis
said he's doubled his fees and he
still has a waiting list of spon
sors who want him to blurb nice
tilings about their products.
Two Medford Officers
Receive Promotions
Promotion of two Medford
army reserve officers has been
announced by the adjutant gen
eral, according to Maj. Walter
Fingerhut, organized reserve
corps instructor here. They are
Donald B. Whalin, from first
lieutenant to captain in the
quartermaster corps, and Robert
C. Taylor, from second to first
lieutenant.
Captain Whalin was an infan
try officer during the war, and
joined the 382nd quartermaster
battalion here upon his return to
Medford. He has served about a
year as operations and training
officer of the battalion, which
was recently upgraded by the
department of the army to a full
strength, M-day unit.
Dead line on Classified Ads: S:3U
p.m for following day; to a.m Mon
day noon Saturday for Sunday ajn
num communities, amone their
friends and their associates, their
word in a business deal would
be accepted unhesitatingly.
THAT brings me up to the
1 point I'm driving at.
Whv is it that AS POLITI
CIANS men will make state
ments they wouldn't think of
making as individuals in ineir
private contacts and their pri
vate dealings with their friends
and their business associates?
Why is it that we so instinc
tively distrust that WE PAY NO
ATTENTION TO the political ut
terances of men who as private
individuals we would believe un
hesitatingly? I DON'T know the answers to
these questions, but I do feel
that the situation that is in
volved is a serious one. If we
can't believe what our political
leaders say, what are we headed
LET me cite another Incident
from the news.
We're in a ruckus with Russia
over an incident that happened
up along the shores of the Baltic
sea. The Russians claim that one
of our planes swung in over
Russian territory and when chal
lenged by the pilot of a Russian
plane STARTED SHOOTING.
Our government denies the ac
cusation flatly (even heatedly)
and strongly intimates that the
plane (unarmed, our officials in
sist) was SHOT DOWN by trigger-happy
Russian pilots.
THAT is serious business. It
might lead to war. Another
world war could be the end of
everything we value. In such a
situation, we ought to be able
to trust our officials absolutely
and unqualifiedly.
But in the city of Washington
Senator Cain of the state of
Washington intimates that our
state department may be giving
us the run-around. In a letter
to Secretary Acheson (which was
promptly given to the reporters)
he says our state department
left a wide range of uncer
tainty' about the plane incident.
He asks Acheson if the state de
partment could "completely dis
prove the possibility that our
aircraft might have blown up or
disintegrated in flight." He says
our state department s note oi
protest left "many a reasonable
and legitimate question" un
answered.
Conlcally shaped, the vase. If
foot long and weighs about IS
pounds.
X
ilAGIC
CIRCLE
1UCKY YOU1 Travel East
by the incomparable Banff
route through the Canadian
Rockies, reveling in gor
geous scenery, superlative
service and excellent food.
Then follow the "Magic
Circle", returning via the
sunny South and glamorous
California or by any direct
route West'
dvs rvui IUIUI uusni, ,
VV, American Bonk gleg.
f g OjS. 'o'Mond SC-20M
WHEN I read that pn the tele
tvoe. here is how I fell
about it: I didn't instinctively
believe Cain. I felt that as a Re
publican senator he was seeking
to make political capital against
our Democratic administration
and its department of state. But
at the same time DOUBTS
WERE RAISED IN MY MIND
AS TO THE TRUTH OF THE
STATE DEPARTMENTS VER
SION OF THE PLANE INCI
DENT UP IN THE BALTIC.
Things like that are bad. They
are tragically bad. They lead
back to the conclusion that when
we can't Instinctively trust our
officials were headed in a dan
gerous direction. I think we
ought to have more plain, simple
honesty in our politics.
RARE INDIAN RELIC FOUND
Boston (U.R) Ditch diggers
working in the public garden
lagoon excavated an earthen
vase believed to be a rare exam
ple of ancient Indian pottery.
REVIVAL
EVERY NIGHT
Rev. Clyde Perdue,
Lakeview, Ore.
Evangelist
A Latter Rain Minister
Wayside Chapel
Buckshot Road
Rev. K. H. Miser
Enjoy Health Rest, Comfort
and Hospitality at the
Buckhorn Mineral
Springs Sanitarium
Hot Mineral
and Hud Batke
for Khetimatlsm,
Arthritis Neuritis,
Nervousness, High
and Low Blood
Pressure and Skin
Emotions.
Osrbon Dloalds Vapor Bathe for
Anthma, Eczema, Colds, Slnua
and Bronchitis.
Buokhorn Mineral Sprlnra
Sanitarium, Bt. 1, Ashland, Ore.
Br. Herman Wezler, Director
Chiropractic Phjslclan
ades or, if they should be a lone
occupant of a cell, can you
IniHKine their terror at night or
their hopelessly lost fcclins by
day?
You say, "my child will never I
get Into that kind of trouble."
Rut how do you know? A per-'
fectly harmless escapade may '
turn out to be something very
serious.
A detention home it not a Jail, ,
but a supervised home where
the young offenders arc cared
for and kept occupied while .
awaiting their hearings. There
are no bHrred windows no 1
barbed wire fences. We need '
such a home very badly now. !
All enn help. For Information ,
concerning a detention home or i
the nerd for one, talk to our very
competent Juvenile officer.
The county budget will be
drawn up soon. There must be
provision in it for a detention
home. Go to see the county
court and tell them what you j
want for our young people in
trouble. We will only get what
we fight for In local as well as '
state or national government. j
Gladys Ragsdale,
Eagle Point, Ore. I
John & Frank Perl
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
40 Years of Continuous Service
Kindly Guidance...
. . . and friendly heip in time of need are assured
when you call Perl's. You can depend upon us
to arrange and perform the last rites EXACTLY
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at moderate cost the reason Perl's have been
leaders for more than 40 years!
Rogue River Valley's Oldest
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Always At Your Service
PERL FUNERAL HOME
624 West Sixth Street Telephone Day or Night 2-6675
John A. Perl
Frank Perl
Always look for
this red
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Th only place you can obtain a new household SINGER Sewing
Machine or one reconditioned by SINGER is from your SINGER
SEWING CENTER, identified by the Big Red "S" on the window!
Listed below is the only SINGER SEWING
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2 SINGIR Sewing Machines reconditioned by
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3. OiKtranteee) repairs by SINOIR experts
benae en written estimates furnished In
advance.
tSINGER Sewing Machines are made In a variety
of tewing heads and cabinet styles. There's one to
suit every need and preference. Choose a portable,
console, desk model, or period design.
Portables
from
89
$50
etui. u. s. pm. ofl. a rm tiMom at a wit a ctimw cowpANt
SINGER SEWING CENTER
Cabinet
models
from$1475
40 No. Front St. - Medford - Phone 2-7207
SINGER SEWING MACHINE COMPANY