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rOXTB MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfokdSTribune
"Xveryon to Southern Oregon
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NEWS PA PER
PUBLISHERS
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ASSOCIATION
flight o' Time
iledford ud Jackson County
History from the files of The
MdJ Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 50 yeirsAo.
(-3 0 TTJEJRS GO
T.;J3. 1947 (Thursday)
Jiniorand adult Workshops
QOfMedford Civic theater held in
thef hamhjr of commefct office.
O
From ,Art!iur Prry's Ye
Smudge Tot celifihn: Many of
OtlwO Older Girls have planted
paoes and hope they ron't ufl
them up in mistake for dande
O Uonj later.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 13. 1937 (Saturday)
A display, illustrating the posi
O tion OT the United States from a
standpoint of national defense,
placed in west show window of
Jackson Couftty Chamber of
Commctce.
Seventy candidates will be In
itiated Wjflnesday by Medford
loctee of the Loyal Order of
MoosiQ
ft YEARS AGO
Feb. 13. 1927 (Sunday)
Jackson County Chamber of
O Commerce plans survey of com
munity nffeas.
O Carpenter's Self Service Shoe
store will soon establish a busi
ness in Medford.
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 13. 1917 (Tuesday)
Abut 300 Republicans from
Rogue Valley attend Lincoln
Day banquet at Medford hotel.
SocSlist party of Talent ar
Qratfges lecture in Talent city hall
nt weeVj
C
Vhaf Your I.Q.?
TJ or t.n correct It upertor; tev
eK (Hi clcht It excellent: five ar
mix X cod.
O o 1- The irst tiles for draining
purposes were manuiaciurea in
Geneva N. Y.; true or false?
2. ln Shakespeare's "Merry
OrVis of Windsor" was William
Page a schoolboy, father, or
courier?
3. Bible: The Lord proclaimed
that the two trumpets be made
of what metal?
4. Does a common housefly
bite?
5. What war did France fight
In 1870-1?
6. To which General did the
Japanese emissaries surrender?
7. What other official title
does the S. President bear?
8. How does a female (non
member of the armed forces)
salute a passing flag?
9. Is the (jxpression "to settle
the bill" a colloquialism?
10. Wrote Kipling: "An' they
're hangin' Danny Dever"
when?
1. True ( 1835). 2. School
bey. 3. Silver (Num. 10). 4.
No. 5. Franco - Prussian War.
6. Douglas MacArihur. 7. Commander-in-Chief.
8. By holding
her right hand over her heart.
9. Yes. 10. "In the mornin'."
Argument Erupts at
Christening; 5 Dead
Jalapa, Mexico (U.R) A chris
tening celebration erupted into
a family argument with pistols
that left five dead and seven
wounded in the nearby village
of Ayahualulco, police said to
day. Authorities said Salvador and
Rosa Perez were bitterly divided
rr on naming theS son and each
Invited relatives to the baptism
to help theiS decide. The parents
were among the wounded.
The baby still has no name,
police said,
a
MAIL TRIBUNE
Valentine,
Ninety-eight years ago
the 33rd state of the Union.
Tomorrow also is St. Valentine's day.
This fortuitous circumstance we have always
thought is a happy one. This
of all 48, Oregon is and
state.
Happy birthday, Oregon!! Be our Valentine.
E.A.
Strength In Diversity
Be true to your own maturity, to your own individual
ity. Accept the good which may come from the ways of
others; but do not be afraid to be different when greater
good lies in your courage in being a non-conformist.
The quotation above is the concluding paragraph
of a column- printed in this newspaper recently. It is
furnished to us by the American Institute of Family
Relations, which generally offers sound advice on
family matters.
We reprint the quotation because it says some
thing which needs saying these days, when there are
so many pressures for conformity, for being, acting,
doing just as everyone else does.
COME of our best thinkers believe that one of the
great strengths of America is its diversity.
Freedom of religion would be impossible without
diversity, and this diversity of religious thought of
fers a "spiritual home" to almost everyone who has
given the matter any serious thought, and who wishes
to associate with like-minded people.
Diversity and non-conf ormism in political thought,
also, is a strength. For how else can the policies and
principles of government be the soundest and best
unless opened to the challenge of disagreement and
criticism ?
"The genuinely mature Individual . . . does not fear his
own ideas, whether they be on cabbage or kings, the proper
date for donning a straw hat or a choice of presidential
candidates."
This is not to say, necessarily, that one need not or
must never accept the ideas of others, for these may
well be good. But it is to say that man should be free
in the "marketplace of ideas" to choose for himself,
without fear or shame, the ideas and ideals which he
feels to be right.
With this freedom, as with all freedom, goes re
sponsibility. One aspect of that responsibility is to
respect the freedom of others.
The quotation attributed to Voltaire is probably
the best guide-post to action when confronted with
ideas which conflict with one's own : "I disagree with
what you say, but will defend to the death your right
to say it" E.A.
Older
The U.S. Department of Labor reports something
which has been well-known to a certain group of
Americans, namely, that once past one's 40th birth
day, it isn't as easy to find a job.
The reason lies, in large part, in the attitude of
employers, the department believes. In many cases
they are reluctant to employ older workers; and for a
variety of reasons.
But also, the department found after taking an
extensive survey, there are other reasons. Among
them are educational requirements, which often an
older person cannot meet; too-rigid physical require
ments ; lack of training or re-training facilities, and
the job-seeker's own fear of looking for work, and his
lack of experience and ability in selling himself to an
employer.
THE department of labor acknowledges this for
the unhappy situation which it is, particularly in
view of the fact that, quote :
Experts who have really studied the problem, know that
older workers are reliable, much more easily amenable to
training than is commonly believed, work well, and are
less liable to leave their jobs than younger persons.
Throughout the nation there is a shortage of
workers, despite the local situations of temporary
unemployment which sometimes crop up. The man
power experts believe that this shortage is going to
get worse before it gets better.
For this reason, it will become increasingly im
portant to take advantage of these older workers,
both for what they can offer as employees, and for
their own satisfaction and dignity as members of the
community. E.A.
Legislature
Salem U.R A bill to give
state police a S600 pay raise was
up for second reading in the
Oregon Senate today.
Another measure, to change
the name of state police to the
"Oregon State Highway Patrol"
also has been introduced. Spon
sors said the change would be
in name only.
The pay bill would boost pri
vates to $4860 a year, sergeants
to $6180 and captains to $7320.
Salem (U.R) A bill intro
duced by Sen. R. H. Chapman of
Coos Bay which would make it
a misdemeanor for an owner or
custodian wilfully to abandon a
dog or cat without making pro
vision for its proper feeding and
shelter was up for second read
ing today.
Salem U.R) A group of
cpunty commissioners testified
before the Senate Highways
committee that they favored unit
Wednesday. February 13, 1957
tomorrow, Oregon r-Dcame
arises from the fact that,
shall remain our favorite
Workers
Briefs
development of U.S. 101 from
Gold Beach to the California
border instead of piece-meal de
velopment. Salem U.PJ A resolution in
troduced in the House provides
for an interim committee to
study the reorganization of state
government with emphasis on
elimination er consolidation of
various boards and commissions.
Salem (U.R) The House
passed 33-23 a bill extending to
June 30, 1959, the cutoff date
for veterans of World War II to
start their training under state
educational benefits.
Salem U.R) Superintend
ent Paul J. Squier told a sub
committee of the joint Ways and
Means committee that the main
objective of the new intermedi
ate penal institution to be built
near Salem would be rehabilita
tion of young prisoners. . -
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with
an eye to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
I.Q." Feature Errs
To the Editor: I don't know
much about my own I.Q., but I
wouldn't give much for the I.Q.
of the person who answered
Satan" to question 3 in Friday's
paper (Page 4). Suppose you
look up Revelations 20:1, where
it says: "I saw an angel come
down from Heaven having the
key of the bottomless pit, and a
great chain in his hand, and he
laid hold on Satan and bound
him a thousand years, and cast
him into the bottomless pit, and
shut him up."
Mrs. A. Hofmann,
Butte Falls, Ore.
Faith and Works
To the Editor: This is in reply
to Evangelist William E. Brown.
Christ did not abolish the Law.
He fulfilled the Law and brought
the Gospel. "The righteous shall
live by faith." Romans. 1:17.
We know what the message of
the Law is, to those who live
under it that every excuse may
die on the lips of him who makes
it and no living man may think
himself beyond the judgement
of God. "No man can justify
himself before God" by a per
fect performance of the Law's
demand s indeed it is the
straight-edge of the Law that
shows us how crooked we are.
Romans 3: 19-20.
But now we are seeing the
righteousness of God declared
quite apart from the Law
(Though amply testified to by
both Law and prophets) it is
a righteousness imparted to, and
operating in, all who have faith
in Jesus Christ. (For there is no
distinction to be made any
where: everyone has sinned,
everyone has fallen short of the
beauty of God's plan.) Under
this divine "system" a man who
has faith is now freely acquitted
in the eyes of God by His gen
erous dealing in the Redemptive
Act of Jesus Christ. God has
appointed Him as the means of
propitiation, a propitiation ac
complished by the shedding of
His blood, to be received and
made effective in ourselves by
faith. God has done this to dem
onstrate His Righteousness both
by the wiping out of the sins of
the past (the time when He with
held His Hand), and by showing
in the present time that He is a
just God and that He justifies
every man who has faith in
Jesus Christ .What hap
pens now to human pride of
achievement? There is no more
room for it. . . .We see now that
a man is justified before God
by the fact of his faith in God's
appointed Saviour and not by
what he has managed to achieve
under the Law. . -Are we then
undermining the Law by this in
sistence on faith? Not a bit of it!
We put the Law in its proper
place. . . .Now if a man works
his wages are not counted as a
gift but as a fair reward. But
if a man, irrespective of his
work, has faith in Him who just
ifies the sinful, then that man's
faith is counted as righteousness,
and that is the gift of God. Ro
mans 3: 21,31. and 4: 4,5.
Gloria Dey,
333 Cross st.,
Medford, Ore.
Suitcases Needed
To the Editor: I wrote an
article to an Eastern newspaper
about fishing and hunting in
Oregon.
I just received a letter from
them. They said we like your
article very much but tell us
one thing, why does an Oregon
fisherman and hunter always
have to carry a suitcase?
We must have a suitcase with
us at all times to carry our fish
ing licenses, hunting licenses,
tags, tickets and stamps.
Everything that runs we must
tag.
Everything that flies we must
paste a stamp on.
Everything that swims we
must have a ticket in our pos
session. Now for that you must carry
a ticket, a punch and a type
writer to give the date, time
and river.
That requires you to carry a
clock.
You must carry a 100-ft. tape
measure to measure the restrict
ed areas below a dam.
Last fall I went over to my
cousin's place at Tule Lake to
hunt ducks.
I shot two mallard ducks, and
before they hit the ground a
game warden rushed up and
asked me if I had stamps.
"Sure I got stamps, I got two
kinds which Jo you want? I got
S and H green stamps and Gold
Arrow stamps," I said.
"You know what I want. I
want the kind you buy in the
Post Office," he said. So I rush
ed over to my suitcase and got
two 3 cent stamps.
"Now what are you going to
do, mail them? I want stamps
with ducks on 'em," he said.
"Then paste these on the
ducks and you will have two
stamps with mallard ducks on
them."
I got home with my ducks.
Everett Acklin
Box 233
Ashland, Ore.
Babson Concerned for
Independent Retailer
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. I am
concerned about the fate of the
independent retailer in today's
highly competitive markets. He
is not keeping
pace with chain
store operators
who spend
large sums of
money on new
equipment,
new lighting,
i n t e nsive ad
vertising and
promotion.
Roger W. Babson
Independent
ijiciunaius musi pay just as
much as the lareg chain opera
tors for advertising space in
newspapers and magazines. Of
ten they must pay more propor
tionately for goods they stock
because they cannot buy in such
large quantities as the chains.
Also, independent retailers are
faced with increasing demands
for higher employee wages and
greater fringe benefits after
these concessions are obtained
initially by employees of big
stores. Too many independent
retailers have already suc
cumbed to these pressures.
These chains have helped
mightily, however, in bringing
down the total cost of distribu
tion. Their savings in buying, in
window dressing and display,
they share with their customers.
They have made and are making
a great contribution to the bet
terment of the American way
of life.
What They Can Now Do
The independent merchant
who prefers waiting on custom
ers to waiting for his turn at golf
has little to worry about. There
always will be a demand for
this personal attention on the
part of certain customers. They
are willing to pay for this per
sonal attention as well as for
credit and delivery. Of course,
the independent merchant must
be willing to advertise and se
cure a good location with plenty
of show windows, always kept
attractive. To believe, however,
that he is destined to be pushed
out of business by department
stores or chain stores or mail
order houses is a mistaken idea.
Retailers can further be help
ed by the plans of the United In
formation Service, with head
quarters at 6 Maiden lane, New
York City. This service enables
consumers to learn quickly (any
time between 6 a.m. and mid
night) where they can get any
desired merchandise. This short
ens the time between the con
sumer's reading of an advertise
ment and his getting into a re
tail store. Cutting this time in
half has the effect of doubling
retail sales. Furthermore, it en
ables a group of merchants to
save the expense of keeping
open evenings by cooperating to
concentrate evening inquiries
through one channel.
Importance of Distribution
The rapid rise of our country
to a position of world power and
the simultaneous expansion of
our industrial economy give
ample evidence that we can pro
duce above and beyond our
needs. The war needs of our
selves and our allies provided a
challenge in production. Wealth
in abundance, in the form of
goods and services, we have
learned to produce.
However, we have been prac
tically standing still in distribu
tion, except for the development
Soviet Russia Developing Big
Campaign to Sap Allied Unity
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia is developing a
big diplomatic campaign in an
obvious attempt to weaken Al-
1 i e d defense
cooperation.
Last Friday
Premier Niko
lai A. Bulgan
in sent a letter
to West Ger
man Chancel
lor Konra'd
Adenauer hol
ding out hope
of German un-
Chartei McCann fication if he
would abandon his ties with the
Western democracies.
Now Foreign Minister Dmitri
T. Shepilov has sent notes to
the United -States, Great Britain
and France outlining a six-point
proposal on policy toward the
countries of the Middle East.
The Soviet government also
has asked that the foreign min
isters of the United States, Can
ada, Britain, France and Russia
attend personally a disarmament
conference to be held in London
next month.
It is reported In London that
Russia intends to announce
some sort of a new disarmament
plan at that meeting.
While this campaign is being
pursued, the Soviet government
is making threats to Britain,
France and other countries that
they will be targets for atomic
weapons if a big war breaks out.
It looks as if the campaign
may be the brain child of Shep
ilov, who succeeded Vyacheslav
M. Molotov as foreign minister
last June 1 and is spoken of as
a coming man in the Soviet rul
ing circle.
T mb( i ft' mmmm
of the chain "5 and 10" variety
stores, the chain supermarkets,
and the chain drug stores.
There, however, is much more
to be done.
Selling Goods Abroad
In addition to making plans
for easier and cheaper move
ment of our production into our
own domestic consumer chan
nels, I forecast that we will also
take steps to sell more Ameri
can-made products abroad.
These products are urgently
needed in many parts of the
world where disease is rampant
because of food and other defi
ciencies. However, no plan has
yet succeeded which would make
surpluses in some nations avail
able to needy people in other
nations, without upsetting the
economic balance between indi
vidual countries or groups of
countries.
We must help solve the prob
lem of the growing imblance be
tween the "have" and the "have-
not" nations. Communism has
made great strides in Europe,
Asia and Africa largely because
Soviet leaders have been so suc
cessful in pointing to the "sel
fish and wasteful" living stan
dards in the U.S. American mov
ies shown abroad are largely re
sponsible for this. Positive steps
toward solving the problem of
international distribution would
thereby remove the greatest
grievance upon which Commu
nism feeds.
Rotarians Honor
Area 4-H Winners
Local 4-H achievement win
ners were honored at a Medford
Rotary club meeting Tuesday.
Honored were Miss Margery
Hatton, home economics exten
sion agent; Mrs. Everett Gibson,
president of the county 4-H
leaders; Jerome Peterson, Cathy
Carroll, Dale Smith, Donna
Brown, Carl Skyrman, Sharon
Coffman and Bob Hayes."
Charles Elmore, Applegate,
one of the Jackson county 4-H
representatives at the National
4-H congress in Chicago, showed
slides of the trip, made by the
20 4-H members from Oregon.
Harvey Fields sang Battle
Hymn of the Republic and was
joined by a chorus of Rotary
members. Rotarian Jimmy Dun
levy read the Gettysburg ad
dress. Rotarian Hal White was pro
gram chairman.
Ike Asked To Name
Negro To High Court
Washington (U.R) President
Eisenhower was asked Tuesday
night to appoint a Negro to the
Supreme Court.
Tomlinson D. Todd, director,
producer and moderator of the
Sunday eight-station network
radio program Americans All,
asked the President in a tele
gram to make the appointment.
Todd, whose program is aired
by the United Broadcasting Co.,
said he took the occasion of Lin
coln's birthday to request that
a Negro be named to succeed re
tiring Justice Stanley F. Reed.
, "The time is now ripe for an
emancipation of colored Amer
icans from the category of exclu
sion to one of inclusion on the
United States Supreme Court
bench," Todd said.
Shepilov went to the foreign
ministry after having been edi
tor in chief of the newspaper
Pravda, the official organ of
the Russian Communist party.
He was not a newspaperman.
He was put into his new post
after a long career as a Com
munist propagandist.
Handsome, disarmingly friend
ly, more than six feet tall, he
is in decided contrast to the dour
Molotov.
A Cover-Up Plan
Shepilov's campaign if it is
his undoubtedly is aimed
partly at covering up Russia's
own embarrassments in its rela
tions with its fellow Communist
countries in Eastern Europe.
But it probably is aimed also
at taking advantage of a period
in which the Western Allies, be
lieving that the danger of a third
world war is Increasingly re
mote, are trying to reduce de
fense spending.
Bulganin's letter is unlikely
to get very far with old Aden
auer. Under him, West Germany
is certain to maintain its ties
with the Western Allies. Nor is
Adenauer the man to believe
that Russia has any intention of
agreeing to the unification of
Germany.
It appears unlikely also that
Shepilov's note to the United
States, Britain and France is
likely to deceive the govern
ments of those countries.
Would Frustrate Doctrine
The six points Shepilov out
lines would have the effect of
frustrating the aims of the new
Eisenhower Doctrine for the
Middle East while leaving Rus
sian free to engage in subver
sive activities.
The note calls for the "liquid
Evidence Piles Up
Showing U.N. Due For
Scrutiny by
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) Consid
erable evidence is accumulating
that the United Nations is due
for a long and
maybe chill
look by the
American peo
ple. This organi
zation of 80
member - na
tions was ac
corded a spe
cial place
among the
Lyle C. Wilson
generally accepted pillars of
freedom and representative gov
ernment along with religion,
good works, free public educa
tion, home and mother.
Now a magnificently reared
GOP Speakers See
Strengthened Party
And Better America
Washington U.R GOP
leaders at Lincoln Day dinners
across the nation Tuesday night
forecast a stronger Republican
party and a better America.
GOP National Chairman
Meade Alcorn Jr. said at Pitts
burgh that the Republican party
will "fight for every seat" in
next year's congressional elec
tions.
'Modern Republicanism is the
engine that gives power, force
and direction to a program de
signed to meet and solve the
problems of today," Alcorn said.
Party of Inclusion
He called the GOP the "party
of inclusion" with room for all
interested in good government.
He called, the Democratic party
tne part of exclusion ana di
vision.
Secretary of Interior Fred A.
Seaton at Boston called on all
Republicans to band together to
regain control of Congress.
Seaton said 58 per cent of
those voting last November cast
their ballots for President Ei
senhower and Vice President
Richard M. Nixon.
To Attract Voters
"And we mean to make such
a record in these next two years i
and present such a ticket in the
congressional races of 1958, that
this time, as a party, we will at
tract a similarly overwhelming
percentage of the voters," he
said.
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon at Hackensack, N.J., said
this year's New Jersey guber
natorial election would be espe
cially meaningful "insofar as
1958 congressional elections are
concerned."
Nixon said the New Jersey
election "coming as it does in
an off year and also in one of
the key industrial states of the
nation . . . will undoubtedly
have considerable national sig
nificance." Elizabeth, N. J. (U.R) Trou
bled by birds and beasties? The
Union County Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Ani
mals advised today that feeding
grain soaked in whiskey to un
wanted pigeons, squirrels and
skunks will "immobilize" them
so SPCA wardens can pick them
up.
ation of foreign bases" in the
Middle East, meaning United
States bases.
What Russia may propose at
the London disarmament meet
ing, whether or not the foreign
ministers attend, remains to be
seen. It may be predicted with
some certainty that it will sound
important but will not offer the
necessary guarantees against the
danger that Russia would be
able to cheat if the Western Al
lies agreed to abolish nuclear
warfare and tear up their de
fensive alliances.
But Shepilov may figure that,
while Soviet enticements may
not deceive the Western Allies,
it costs nothing to try.
I J Ml II
CONFIDENCE-
For over 22 years we
have endeavored to merit
your confidence, and
your continued approval
of our efforts is most
gratifying! With all our
C. M. Litwiller
interests 100 local, and with charges that are exception
ally moderate, we confidently assume the next decade of
service to and for the Rogue River valley.
LITWILLER
Funeral
Home
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy. 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close .
t-1 ' -f"
Americans
12-year-old, the UN more like
ly than not must prove title to
the special place freely accord
ed it at its inception in 1945.
The earliest end sharpest com
plaint against the United Na
tions was in protest against the
use to which the Soviet Union
was permitted by the UN Chart
er to make of its veto power.
A Dead Stymie
The Communist veto was and
is always a potential dead stymie
to UN council action against
major Communist felonies any
time, anywhere. The UN coun
cil was able to move in the 1950
Korean crisis only because the
Soviet Union delegate earlier
had walked out in protest on
another matter.
To the veto aggravation now
are added others to which Re
publican Senate Leader William
F. Knowland (Calif.) invited pub
lic attention in a speech here
before a university audience.
The principal points made by
Knowland against the UN to
which he is a United States dele
gate, were these:
The trend toward UN ac
ceptance of a double standard
of international morality.
The trend toward bloc vot
ing in the UN. o
The aforementioned Soviet
use and abuse of the veto. ,
Compliance Big Factor -
Perhaps the most serious dam
age to the standing of the United
Nations in the United stales has
been its failure or inability to
obtain compliance. Among the
nations which have flouted the
UN council or assembly recent
ly are, in addition to Israel, the
Soviet Union on Hungary; India
on Kashmir, Egypt on Israeli
use of the Suez Canal.
Considering the foregoing.
Knowland made a statement
which, also, is remarkable: He
said that on its record so far,
no free nation "dare rk its
security on the United Nations'
ability to function effectively."
If so, there soon will be many
to urge that the UN does notQ
justify its existence, to say noth
ing of qualifying as anchor-man
for U.S. foreign policy. That is
the vital role assigned the UN
by Presidents Truman and Ei
senhower, in turn.
TONIGHT!
Mar t
HYI.IAII
APPEU1AU c
Wednesday- ( 0
What Price Souls
"The Cheapest Thing
in America"
Thursday
There is no Difference
"What We Look Like
to God"
Friday o j
The Land of BegmningC!
Again
and
Featuring ...
Johnny Bisagno
and his
Golden Trumpet
Crusade and Choir
Special Musical
Package
First Baptist
Church
North Central at 5th
7:30 P.M.
Mrs. Litwiller
"It is better to know us and not need us,
than to need us and not know us."
1