TWELVE MEDrORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Taeeder. April I. Ml
everyone In Southern Oregon
Heads The Mail Tribune
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
37-29 North fir St. Phone 2-911
ROBERT W. HUHL, Editor
. ERNIST R- GILSTRAP, Manager
HERB GREY, Advertising Manager
Z. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC AIXEN JR.. City Bailor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEW H I . sporui uior
OLIVE STAR CHER. Society Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newipaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County His
tory from the files ef the Mail
Tribeee 10. 20. 30 sad 40 yean
10 YEARS AGO
April 8, 1942
(It was Wednesday)
Medford city council grants
permit to Rogue Valley Transit
company to operate om servm
within the city limits.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: That emi
nent tidbit of spring, the straw
berry shortcake, has arrived and
due to the war is shorter of both
strawberries and cake than nor
mal. 20 YEARS AGO
April 8. 1932
(It was Friday)
Jackson county tax officials
isue 1,300th tax receipt; large
number of tax payments be
lieved sign of "return to nor
malcy." Marked revival of mining ac
tivity reported in Rogue valley;
many orders reported for spe
cial mining braces and timbers.
30 YEARS AGO
April 8, 1922
(It was Saturday)
Rogue valley orchardists an
nounce they will start manufac
ture of lime sulphur spray; local
manufacture expected to cut
price per barrel from 10.50 to
$8.75.
Carl Y. Tengwald, Medford,
announces candidacy of Adjutant
General George A. White for
governor of Oregon.
40 YEARS AGO
April 8, 1912
(It was Monday)
Eugene W. Chafin, one-time
Prohibition party candidate for
president, calls local option on
liquor sales "unrighteous, un
wise and unefficient" in debate
here.
Campaign manager for Sena
tor Robert M. LaFollette ex
presses confidence here that Wis
consin solon will carry Oregon
by wide margin.
HAS If ARROW SQUEAK
Beacon, N. Y. U.R) A casual
conversation with Patrolman
George Van Pelt Is credited with
saving Mithias Angele's life.
Angele mentioned that he found
two objects resembling metal
"pineapples" and intended to
take them apart. They were
band grenades.
Court Records
POLICE COURT
Carl Wesley Fisher, no stop at stop
Sign. $5.
Ekerson Paint and Roof store, over
Bignt parking, ss.
Bob Lee Mclntire. route 4. box 537A.
Grants Pass, reckless driving. S25.
Orva Pearle Stevens, no stop at stop
sign. $5.
Evelyn Toynette Watson, no stop at
stop sign. S5.
Russell S. McDonald, expired license
piaies, as.
Ben Arma Olea. reckless driving,
liquor involved. (25.
DISTRICT COURT
Raymond L. McVay, no operator's li
cense, $6.
Harold Ray Payne, inadequate
brakes. 5.
Frank L. Blore. improper lights. $5.
Charles Truman Miller, no PUC per
mit. S15.
CIRCUIT COURT
Marshall. Hal B. vs. Lester Y, di
vorce complaint.
Estate of Walter Wright Marshall,
petition.
Craber. Lawrence Leonard vs. Ar
leta. divorce complaint.
- Holbrook, Glenn Howel vs. Elvira
Melendez. complaint in equity of di
vorce. Cleek. Jerre Mae vs. Donald LeRoy.
divorce complaint.
( Neal, Clara Bell vs. Ledger, divorce
complaint.
Oden. Dolores Fay vs. Vernon Ray.
divorce complaint.
1 Mattoon. Edna. vs. John W. Camp
bell Jr.. Henry J. Huber and L. P.
Kelly, data btf.-ness as Evergreen
Bus line, complaint.
A Great Newspaper
Like men, some newspapers achieve greatness
and. others have greatness thrust upon them.
As an example of the latter is the Washington,
D.C. Post It was not born great, did not achieve great
ness, but thanks to the recent rise of McCarthyism in
Washington, had greatness thrust upon it
TTHAT is to say in the brief time of half a dozen years
years it has gained such increased stature, that as
of today, it would be ranked (by this department at
least) as among the first five or six genuinely GREAT
metropolitan newspapers in the United states.
And it has attained this eminence, not by doing
anything unusual, or sensational, but merely by cleav-
iner to its lone established line of ULiNllLNE Amen
canism, as opposed to the spurious type, in spite of
the strains, pressures and stresses of the recent hys
terical wave of communist witch-hunting and super-
patriot propaganda.
TN OTHER words the Post has followed that well
A known bit of inspired wisdom the late Rudyard
Kipling presents to his son to all sons in his poem
"U" which started out as follows:
IF you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs etc., etc.
' Well, that is all the "Washington Post" has done,
it has kept its head but don't let that fool anyone
for that is a great achievement and during the last half
decade has, sad to relate, been realized by a shocking
ly small percentage of the American press.
So the No. 1 honor in that distinguished minor
ity along the North Atlantic coast at least we be
lieve should be given this comparatively small, but
extremely courageous and enlightened Washington,
D. C, daily.
THE immediate cause of this laudatory and unso-
licited tribute has been the receipt of a copy of a
speech by the Post s chief editonal writer, Alan isarth,
delivered about a year ago before the American Asso
ciation of University Professors, from which the iol
lowing is an extract, quote:
We are succumbing to fear to a fear that is in large
part groundless and neurotic
Espionage and sabotage are real threats to security.
But fears that the Communists can overthrow the Govern
ment of the United States by force and violence is an absurd
nightmare. Fear of subversion that is, of the-influence of
communist propaganda and doctrine is equally a bug
bear. The United States is not ripe for revolution. And dem
ocratic ideas are quite healthy enough to withstand Com
munist ideas. The democratic system is not only superior to
the Communist system, but it is superior also in its appeal
to men who have been privileged to live under it. We need
not be afraid our fellow-Americans will choose submission
and servitude in preference to responsibility and liberty.
But the democratic process can not operate when dis
agreement is in constant danger of being considered dis
loyal. . . . Unity in short does not grow out of uniformity;
it grows out of resolved conflict The present short-circuit
ings of this kind of democratic conflict presents a deadly
peril to our national security."
CXTREMELY wise, and 100 true!
" We wish the Hearst and McCormick (Chicago
AND Washington) press might copy, but never fear,
they won't. They are having too much fun and profit
throwing raw hamburger to the howling and mad
dened wolves of prejudice, fear and political lust
R.W.R.
The "Smear" Has Started
'
Some months ago it was predicted in this column
that as the campaign developed the smearing of ben
eral Eisenhower would not come so much from the
Democrats as from the Taft-Republicans.
The April issue of "Williams Intelligence Sum
mary," a disgusting pamphlet published in banta
Ana, California, supporting Taft and General Mac-
Arthur, has reached this desk, and furnishes ample
evidence to sustain this prediction.
AS IN previous issues there is a picture of General
" Eisenhower on Page 1 consorting' with General
Zhukov, the Communist military hero; only instead
of two men drinking toasts they are riding in an open
motor car through the streets of Berlin.
Whether this is a faked photograph like the other
one, we don't know, but the text reminds the reader
that the picture shows what "good friends" the two
Generals were thus explaining why General Eisen
hower allowed the Russians to take over Berlin while
he held his own forces in abeyance, and why he is the
'willing tool" of the Jews, the Negroes, the interna
tional bankers and Communist "gangster generals, de
stroyer of Christian peoples in Europe," like this
Zhukov!
Crosstovrn
ty Roland Cm
I LULU1 1LU
.a 11 I 1
"Just a minute! Did your candidal actually promise to lower
pri:sa ot is that a promise TOUTIE making FOR him?
Matter of Fact
r
THE KEF ATJVCH CANDIDACY secret of his intention to do
Washington For the first
time, the Presidential candidacy
of Sen. Estei Kefauver is be
ginning to be taken a little bit
seriously by the professional
politicians. Not long ago the pro
fessionals almost unanimously
laughed off Kefauver's efforts.
Now they are at least showing
signs of hedging. The main rea
son is quite obvious. The Demo
cratic race more and more re
sembles the ancient roundelay:
"Four green bottles a-hanging
on the wall.
"If one green bottle should acci
dentally fall.
"There'll be three green bottles
a-hanging on the wall."
Within the last two weeks.
two green bottles have fallen off
the waU President Truman,
and Sen. Robert Kerr, who can
only recover by a miracle from
the trouncing he received at Ke
fauver s hands in the Nebraska
primary. That leaves two green
bottles a-hanging on the wall
Kefauver and Gov. Adlai Steven
son of Illinois. This simple
process of elimination explains
why the professionals no longer
laugh off the Kefauver candi
dacy quite so blithely as they
used to.
Other green bottles may, of
course, appear on the waU be
fore Convention time, but it is
hard to see who they may be.
Sen. Richard Russell has never
been given much of a chance for
the nomination, simply because
the Northern, New Deal wing
of the party stiU exercises a veto
power. His age almost certainly
rules out the well-liked Vice-
President Alban Barkley, and
probably House Speaker Sam
Rayburn as well. All the other
hopefuls, like Connecticut's Sen.
Brien McMahon. are really can
didates for the Vice-Presidency,
see
MOREOVER, it Is now clear
that Kefauver is likely to
go to the Convention with a re
spectable block of delegates. He
is sure of Tennessee, Wisconsin
and New Hampshire, and almost
certainly Oregon and California,
with its 68 delegate vote. He has
a good chance for delegate sup
port in Washington, Maryland.
Florida and Nebraska (although
Kerr is trying to bang on to
eight delegates there, despite his
defeat). And he will certainly
pick up Mattered delegate
strength elsewhere.
National Committeeman Da
vid L. Lawrence, of Pittsburgh,
for example. Pennsylvania's
Democratic leader, strongly fa
vors Stevenson, and Pennsyl
vania has been accounted a sure
Stevenson state. But Lawrence
now believes that Kefauver may
pick up a fair slice of delegates
fronvPennsylvania. New Jersey.
also previously accounted a sure
Stevenson state, may have a
split delegation too. And de
spite organization opposition.
the Kefauver forces count on i
number of delegates from Ohio.
Some observers are predicting
that Kefauver will go to the
convention with 230 or
300 votes on the first ballot, al
though it is difficult to
where he can find this sort of
strength. At the same time Ste-
TCnfons probable nrst-bauot
reduced by the
sons which has
sprung up since Truman's with-
whatever he can fb stop a Ke
fauver nomination. It is even
being said by insiders that Tru
man will reconsider and run
again himself if there is no other
way to stop Kefauver.
Yet the most important single
factor is the decision of Gov.
Stevenson on the course he wiU
pursue. At one point, tnmedi
ately after Truman's announce
ment at the Jefferson-Jackson
dinner, Stevenson was so close
to pulling out that his friends
feared he might do so the next
day. By the time he left Wash
ington 24 hours later, however,
they were convinced he was a
candidate.
Stevenson is now being urged
to issue a statement clarifying
his position, soon after the April
8 Illinois primary in which he
will be renominated for Gov
ernor. He is being urged to ex
plain that he cannot campaign
actively for the Presidency
while he is running for Gov
ernor; but that he will accept the
nomination if it is offered; and
that he intends therefore to
make his position on national is
sues clear in a number of
speeches.
If Stevenson does take such a
stand, the tendency to laugh off
the Kefauver candidacy may be
come general again. Even so, the
candidate whose only really
threatening rival has shown
every sign of genuine reluct
ance, cannot be entirely laughed
off. Moreover. Stevenson's re
luctance is likely to become
more genuine and more obvious
if Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
1 the clear Republican choice.
In this case, Kefauver may be
the Democratic nominee simply
for lack of any other Democrat
willing to take on the formid
able Eisenhower.
(Copyright, 1952.
New York Herald Tribune)
Oklahoma Soon Will
Observe Anniversary
Of Great Land Run
BY LYLE C. WILSON
Oklahoma City (U.R) From
tepees to towers in 50 years is
the way they describe the mira
cle of Oklahoma out here.
Here Oklahomans soon will be
celebrating the anniversary of
the great land run of 1889. Near
ly 2,000,000 acres of free land
were opened to setUement at
noon, April 22. 1889. and folks
have been writing about that
"run 'and making movies about
it ever since.
Both of the 32-story "towers'
down the block from the United
Press office here stand on land
that was to be had for free on
that long-ago April day and aU
the city and county area to boot.
But Oklahoma scarcely got go
ing until the turn of the century.
Oklahoma was not a state until
1907.
Miracle Stunning
To a boy who came here more
than 40 years ago and comes
back today, the miracle is stun
ning although yet far from com
plete. Villages have become towns.
Towns have become cities. Okla
homans have developed a pride
in their state as fierce as the
pride of Texas. WeU, almost as
fierce. In this city where there
was not a single park nor a tree
as taU as a house in 1910, there
are acres and acres of shade and
beauty.
Over in Piatt National Park
100.000 redbud trees are in
bloom right now along a nine
mile drive. Even one single
blooming redbud is a sight to
see. And there are lakes. All of
these years ago there wasn't a
dozen places in Oklahoma which
consistently would float a canoe.
Oklahomans can show you today
scores of lakes and one of them
tops 100,000 acres. State and na
tional parks conserve the raw
beauty that the, Indians knew.
Great Institution
South of here 20 miles, which
soon will be spanned by a mod
ern four-lane highway, the Uni
versity of Oklahoma has devel
oped into one of the reaUy great
institutions of learning on this
continent and let who will in
the Ivy League laugh and dis
believe, that is really true.
A visitor who matriculated
there 35 years ago is lost among
the buildings of the institution,
and ponders that if he had sought
to enter the campus in 1917 by
the route chosen today, he would
have needed wire clippers to
crash the fences and, besides,
might have disturbed the stock.
Times Have Changed
Times have changed, indeed.
And along with a high standard
of learning, the state puts out a
football team which always is
tops or near it. There will be no
laughing disbelief about that.
There are bridges now where
we used to ford the rivers, and
instead of none at aU, there are
7,200 miles of paved road in the
state system.
The banks are bulging and the
people are rich by 1910 stand
ards. State bank deposits swelled
from $43,823,441 to $300,492,018
in less than 40 years. The big in
crease has come since 1937.
There still is oil underground,
and gas. But the state's greatest
crop is handsome kids. The big
gest chunk of money comes
from agriculture. The sun is hot
but the nights are cool. And in
April, the state of Oklahoma is
just one great big bursting blossom.
No wonder those fellows up
in New York wrote sweet music
about it.
O-o-o-oh, what a beau-ti-ful
morning . . .
Moves by Russians
Have All Ear Maries
Of Peace Offensive
By PHIL NEWSOM
United Press Foreign Analyst
Russia is launching what
seems to have all the earmarks
of another peace offensive.
And it was
another of
.those times
when we could
well wish for
an inside view
of the minds of
the men in the
Kremlin. What
are they up to
this time?
The outward
signs have been
plain.
First Russia proposed a peace
treaty for a unified Germany
which would have its own army
a complete reversal from her
previous stand and one which
caught many of her propaganda
mouthpieces by surprise.
Then Premier Stalin chooses
I'M Nsow
Congressional Quiz
QssHisai 4 Aetvan ea Wast Gees ea at rhe Capital
res.aee by Qaertwli Newt Features
THE entire filthy sheet is similarly mendacious and
disgusting but with the approach of the Oregon
nrimarv. mnro nf the name mav Via ovrxwtorl arm
X "-, J w UMIV M4HJ W VrtJ'VVW VSe JMssVb f ' w
there will probably be some voters gullible enough. SJffffiJf
and sufficiently susceptible to primitive appeals tel
racial hatreds and prejudices, to swallow the nauseat-1 drawaL sen. McMahon wui be
ino hait I Connecticut's favorite son. and
o
The same sort of smear-propaganda was resorted
to in New Hampshire, however, and according to press
reports the hard-shelled Yankees just used the "hand
outs" to light their kitchen fires and rekindle their
pipes. Perhaps just perhaps a majority of the vot
ers of this state will be similarly intelligent and resist
ant to this revival of completely discredited Ku Klux
Klan tactics. We hope so I
THE 1952 presidential campaign promises to be wild
enough, sufficiently depressing and distressing
without the injection of a type of political black
guardism that by common consent the voters of this
state, regardless of party politics, should consign to
the garbage dump, immediately .upon receipt
-K.WJC
Sen. Hubert Humphreys Minne
sota's. W. Avert 11 Harriman is
now likely to get New York's
first vote, and Michigan's Got.
G. Mermen Williams is toying
with favorite son ideas, with one
eye on the vice-presidency,
e e e
rrHZSJE art seme of the rea-
sons why the professoinals
are beginning to take the Kefau
ver candidacy a little seriously.
Yet they stiU quote very heavy
odds against the Tennessee Sen
ator. Kefauver Is almost unani
mously disliked by the Northern
organization;, and the labor
groups, as in Ohio for example,
largely oppose him. la his native
South, he it -generally regarded
as dangerous- renegade. What
at more. Truman baa made no
Q. What is unconstitutional
about the lobby law?
A. According to a March 17
special federal court ruling on a
suit of National Association of
Manufacturers vs. the Attorney
Polish officers going to cost the
U. S.T fc
A. The cost will total $85,000,
if the Committee makes out on
the amount so far granted. Orig
inally given $20,000, the com
mittee to investigate and study
General, sections of the law re-'the Katyn Forest massacre was
auirinc detailed reports from
lobbying groups are unconstitu
tional because ley are too
vague to make dear what is il
legal. The court also knocked
out penalties for the violation.
The ruling concerned individual
lobbyists only in that it removed
the penalty for non-compliance.
Q. Do the Democratic Sana
tors seeking President Truman's
lob share bis views en major
A. As shown by a Congres
sional Quarterly comparison of
the president's statement with
the lawmakers' roll-call voting
on 44 major domestic and foreign
policy Issues, here are the num
ber of times three senators, an
nounced candidates for the presi
dency, stood with and against
Mr. Truman: Estes Kefauver (D-
Tenn.). with 38 times, against
four, not recorded twice; Robert
S. Kerr D, Okla.). with 32,
against II. once unrecorded;
Richard B. Russell (C Ga ).
with 20. against 23, unrecorded
once.
a What rosidant waa the
champion vetoer of Cngression.
el lagislatieaf
A. Franklin D. Roosevelt
holds the tiUe. During 12 years
in the White House, using either
the -regular" or -pocket" veto,
he scuttled $31 public and pri
vate bills which otherwise would
bare become laws. The House
and Senate overrode him on
nine Runners, un for the veto
record were G rover Cleveland, j
who in eight years rebutted con
gress on 54 bills and was over
ridden seven times, and Harry;
S. Truman, who has vetoed 241 !
bills and been overridden on 11. j
granted another $85,000 by the
House March 20. This was to
carry the probe to Europe and
then wind it up.
Q. How's the bast way to
write a letter to my Congressman?
A. Here are the suggestions
Rep. Walter H. Judd (R., Minn.),
made to his constituents: A Con
gressman likes short, "intelli
gent, well-thought-out" letters
which present a definite position.
even if he does not agree with
it He does not like letters that
"demand" or threaten or boast
of the writer's influence. He
does like a pat on the back when
you approve of something he has
done. "He is quite as human as
you," Judd said.
(Copyright, 1952,
Congressional Quarterly)
Candidates' flight
Slated at Vimer
Wimer A community-spon
sored candidates' night will be
held here Wednesday, it was an- j
nounced today. The meeting will :
be at 8 p. m. in the Enterprise
Grange halL
All candidates for public of- j
fice from Jackson county arc !
invited to attend, and will be
encouraged to make brief state- i
merits in behalf of their candi
dacies, sponsors said.
'this particular time to say he
sees no more danger of a world
war now than two or three years
ago.
Third Development
A third development was the
calling in Moscow of an Inter
national Economic Conference,
on its face designed to increase
trade between East and West.
Next came last week-end's an
nouncement by the official Rus
sian government newspaper Iz
vestia that the Soviet Union
stands ready to solve "by peace
ful means" all outstanding in
ternational questions.
And finally Indian Ambassador
Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrisnan
came away from a half-hour dis
cussion with Stalin Saturday
night to say:
"Following my interview with
Stalin, I feel there isn't an out
standing problem now dividing
the world which cannot be solved
by discussions and negotiations
. . . every effort should be made
to get the top people together."
Moves Sean Late
All these Russian moves might
have had a better reception had
they come six or seven years
ago before the world got used to
Communist double talk and sus
picious of a dove of peace which
lines its nest with rifles.
Thus the West is taking an
understandable cynical view of
these newest Red "peace" of
fers. Vice-Adm. C. Turner Joy, who
heads the United Nations truce
team in Korea, once remarked
disgustedly that the Communists
understood nothing but force and
that they could not negotiate on
even terms.
Admiral Joy spoke from bitter
experience.
His reasoning can be applied
today.
A fish which can, live in either
air or water inhabits lakes and
rivers in tropical Venezuela and
Brazil. Called the buco, it bur
rows into mud during the dry.
season, using lungs instead of
gills to breathe until the rainy
season begins again.
FBI Investigation
Of Indian Riiroaii
VI SIIMIWU VHIVUH
Land Sale Ordered
Portland U.R) James B.
Poster, special agent in charge of
the Portland FBI office, said
Tuesday an investigation by the
FBI of the Indian Bureau's sale
of 800 acres of trust lands at
Gold Beach, Ore., had been ord
ered on the request of the De
partment of Justice.
. He said there was no connec
tion between the order and the
statement of the new attorney
general, James P. McGranery,
that the FBI will investigate re
ports of corruption in govern
ment Poster said he thought
"this was jelled before Judge Mc
Granery was appointed."
Investigation Asked
Henry L. Hess, U. S. attorney
for Oregon, said he had asked for
the FBI investigation "as soon
as I was made aware of some of
the aspects of that sale."
Hess asked the FBI to investi
gate some "collateral issues" in
volved in a federal suit to void
the sale of the timberlands.
The sale was made last August
with the Portland Indian Bureau
office's approval. The land was
sold through 9 series of trans
actions for $135,000. The federal
suit and a suit by the Portland
Trust Bank, both aimed at -voiding
the transaction, claimed the
land was worth upwards of
$350,000.
One of these days medical
scientists will find out what
makes such men as "Dad" Harris
tick and then maybe they'll be
closer to their goal of making
most people live to be a 100 or
more.
The Book that
Conquers Fear
The false mask of evil's
boasted power is torn off
by Christian Science. No
longer need anyone drit
a dose of despair and live
in fear. A great book
Science -Am
Health m&
Key to the Scriptures
by Mary Baker Eddy
containing the full state
ment of Christian Science,
shows to any sincere seeker
the way of liberation.
This book that conquers
feat is studied together with
the Bible these are the
Christian Science textbooks.
New light is shed on the
Bible. New hope is ours as
we see bow to find God's
infinite goodness right
where we are.
Multitudes have found
release from every phase of
human woe by studying
these books in the new,
dear light which Christian
Science sheds at once on
the problems of daily life.
You can do the same and
find freedom from fear.
Science and Health may be
bough t, read, or bono wed at
Christian Science
READING ROOM
228 West Sixth Street
or send $3 and a copy in the
blue doth Library Edition
will be mailed postpaid.
Yoa are inTittd to mike full asc of
the above sod other public KessV
ins Rooms (Un ia roar aeiahbof
hood Kot on reqaet).Ioi onnsrioe
concerning free public lecture,
church services and Sunday Schoal
ia alto a -ratable in these atoon. '
a Hew saack ia
seek of the waxttaae
ine House
Of'
WINDOW SHADES
MAM TO OftDtt
BARNARD'S
S17 L Mate Hsss S-S4t7
YOU
. . . will be the judge of what you
will pay for a service, here at Perl's.
... and regarless of the cost de
cided upon; you may rest assured
that the final tribute will be in
perfect taste; beautiful and im
pressive. Our experienced staff is
always tactful and discreet in every
detail.
; . p
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44 Years of Friendly Service .