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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1963)
A TUESDAY. JANUARY 1. 1983 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDF0R9, OREGON Everyone In Southern Oregon '.Iteoda TIM MUJMbun" 5iibllhaDi'ily except iaiurday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. WNorth Fir Si, Ph.J7:i-Hl nrT'm"lllHI. Editor tttRB GREY AdverUinMnaser Cr.RAl.nT i.ATHAM. Bui. Mar frJIC W ALLEN JR-. Mn. Editor 6AHL H ADAMBi Wy arov puidm a n Te Editor PICHARD JEWTT. SoorU JJjtor PALE tRICKaON.Circuluon Mg I An lr,rf.nniienl NtWipaptr Bntered as Mcond elett matter at Medford. ureion March 3. 189' hi initr.RlPTION RATES Itv in Ai4var.ee. ! . e.,nAmv 1 vaar 818.00 Daily and Sunday J mo. 10.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mot 5.00 limn., only One year ts.oo lln.le Copy (M"'i ,. on .75 Sunday Only 1 mo. ayo c.rrlui and Vendori Copy 10o Official Piper of City of"Medford pfflclal J'aperjrt. Jartaim County . United Press internaiionai ! Full Leased Wire 'Up! Telephoto Newsploturea i"MEMBER OF AUDIT-BUREAU" Advertising Representative. I NELSON ROBERTS 4t ABSOCI. I ATES Ot'ltee In New York. Chi cago. Detroit. Sf n rranclaco Los ! AngelM. Seattle. Portland j Den'-er. Happy New Year! py cimei-And Motor Bout;- Dally and Sundiy 1 year W " t Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.7 ! Sunday Only 1 mo. 3 1 A r Ration At NfWSPAPil PUillSHaftS ASSOCIATION EDITORIAL c8TI3N Flight b' Time Medford and Jackson County History from- the tiles of The Mall Tribune .10, 20, 30, 40 ind 50 yesrs aoo. 10 YEARS AGO Jen. 1, 1953 (Tuesday) ; Two Medlord companies ol the Oregon National Guard launch program to inform public of service rendered by the Guard. - Valuation nf construction during 1952 dropped SO per cent from 1951, according to city building inspector. 20 YEARS AGO Jan. 1, 1143 (Monday) Mcdford markets report na tionwide shortage of meat has not hit Rogue valley, although "slight scarcity" ot beef and smoked meats is noted. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "T h c new Governor will be acti vated at Salem a week from today and It couldn't happen to a nicer man. The same day the legislature will start func tioning, as It Is called." Happy New Year! We offer this traditional wish, not only to our readers, but to men of good will wherever they may be, for it is only by the work of men of good will that there will be a 1964. Heaven knows that the men of ill will almost succeeded in ending 1962 before it was scheduled to depart, and chances are they'll be doing their darndest to mess things up again in 1963. Bad cess to them ! But, to those who are earnestly working for peace, and justice, and order, and prosperity, and decency; to those who believe that honor and principle are still words with meaning; to all those who truly are men of good will : Happy New Year! E.A. Graciousness No More? "Exactly! Why Shouldn't He Break Away?" Jan. 1, 1933 (Wednesday) " . Organization of new Jack son county court stalemated when appointment of R. E. Ncalon, Table Rock, as coun ty commissioner is considered Invalid; opinion by District Attorney George Codding states appointment was prop erly made. Mcdford Fire Chief Roy El liott estimates that incendiary fires caused damage totaling S74.4-U.29 in packing house district during 1932. 40 YEARSAG5 Jan. 1. 1923 (Thursday) George O. Timothy, 73. re tires as Mcdford chief ot po lice, a position he had held since 1917. County clerk's records show 660 births and 41)2 deaths in Jackson county during 1923. tO YEARS AGO Jan. 1, 1913 (Saturday) Juckfun County Sheriff Wil bur A. Jones, "through heavy sacrifice," makes up shortage of $21,370 in his collections which he discovered on re turning from Christmas vaca tion. Thomas A. Edison demon strates his latest invention, a combination of moving pic tures and the phonograph, called the kinclophone. What's Your I.Q.? Hint et ten correct il superior; seven er aiehi it eictllent; five er mmmmAmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm The Portland Reporter, in its year-end issue, mourns the passing of "graciousness." "The truly gracious Individual it becoming harder and harder to meet, even though any one should realize that the personable fellow enjoys more of life's blessings, and spreads more of them, than does the grouch, and that if everyone were gracious, many of problems would vanish." The words "gentleman" and "ladv" which had a real and readily identifiable meaning in terms of graciousness have now simply become signs so one can tell which rest room is which. THE Reporter speculates that "the decline in rn'MpiniiatlfisB la i-lno in tha faafot nana tho mounting tensions, the realization that the cold war could erupt into atomic annilnhation. We re too busy, too preoccupied and too mired in worry and responsibility to be nice, we rationalize. lhen it rejects this thought, and points out tnat the truly big people, the ones burdened with the greatest responsibilities, the busiest ones, are often those who are the most cheerful, and the most concerned with the feelings of others. It adds: "It is in the ranks of the small shots, the fellows captivated by the illusion of their own importance, the fellows absorbed with making impressions, that graciousness is scarce. This may be one reason why small shots remain small shots." 1MUCH of what the Reporter says is true. But we wonder if its basic premise that graci ousness is really in smaller supply than it used to be is accurate. We suspect that it is true in some situations; untrue in others. for instance, on the streets of Medford one can walk along and find many a smiling face and friendly nod. Not so in New York, however, for there if one attempts a smile, a blank stare or suspicious glance is the result. . there is something about the atmosphere of u: ..m ...u:..u i,.. i i .,j !,, iiuusi uiu, cuius wiuuii ui ecus aiuuiuess ami cwuiie- fnmmm, o, c4,,f. t janitor in the midst of a couple ox million people than almost anywhere else. XHAT is graciousness? The desk dictionary says it is the quality of being kindly, cour teous, affable, charming, agreeable, friendly. It seems to us that it arises only in people who have sufficient self-confidence ana self respect that they need have no fear of others. This together with a friendly interest in others, is what makes for graciousness. Whether or not it is a vanishing commodity, as the Reporter believes, it certainly can never be in over-supply. It is, in fact, simply a way of living the Golden Rule. And if the he Goiden Rule were universally lived, we could make our own Heaven, right here on earth. E.A. Radio Log Useful? For many years, the Mail Tribune has run the logs of the valley's radio stations. It has done this as a service to its readers, and, unlike many newspapers elsewhere, has done so without charg ing the radio stations for the space. With the advent of television, a similar serv ice has been performed for the TV log. Now, because of the changes in the habits of most people concerning the broadcast media, and a resulting considerable change in the type of programming offered by the radio stations, we are led to wonder whether or not that space could not be put to better use. PI, mBSt r'Wi mtm """MUxa Vj!S Matter of Fact y jMPh ai.sp id New York Herald Tribune Syndicate 1. Which Canadian city has the largest population? 2. How many cubic inches are there in one cubic fool? 3. What would the follow ing description most likely refer to: The West half of the Northwest quarter? 4. The microscopic study nt living tissue is called what? 5. Arc there any active vol ranorut in the continental United Slates? 6. What means of commu nication uses the iconoscope? 7. What II the common name for the leucocytes In the blood? 8. Where did Casry Jones get his first name? 9. From what two essential Ingredients Is soap generally mader 10. How wa MVGinty dress ed when he wont lo the bot tom of the arm? Answers: 1. Montreal. . 1.728. 3. Land designation. 4. Biopsy. S. Yet Ml. Lessen. Calif, I, Telertalen. T. While corpuscles. I. Kansas City (KC). 9. Lye and fat, 10. Best suit of clothes. 17E WOULD appreciate hearing from Mail Tribune readers: 1. Do you use the radio logs regularly? 2. Would you miss them if they were no longer published? H. Do you believe they serve a useful func tion ! A post card will do, and they need not be signed, unless you wish them to appear in the Communclations column. Readers' assistance in this will be greatly appreciated. E.A. Fog Walking Communications Letters to the Editor mut bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of e pen name or initial for publication Is permissible The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters p.inted in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in tact the contrary Is often the cast. We found a new dimension to fog last night. We walked in it. Jn common with practically everyone else, we have dune our share of cursing the white, damp, blinding fog. It is a special nuisance when driv ing. But walking in it, at niglu. watching the street and car and porch lights appear and fade; watching the white swirls and patches and fin gers curl behind passing cars this had an eerie and bizarre beauty we had almost forgotten. -E.A. Do Killing To the Editor: I have read Hank De Voss' column of Dec. 28 three times, and each time I read it I got a little madder, because I was one of those stupid petition circulators, but the petition I circulated for a sportsman's club in the valley didn't ask for the change in game management from the game commission to the county commissioners, but was a petition asking the gov ernor to use his powers to stop doe seasons until the deer population doubles from the present number. Of apprximatcly 135 per sons contacted, less than 10 refused to sign the petition. The few intellectuals in the valley should move before their minds become ruined aim. I don't regard a doe deer as a sacred animal that should never be killed for food. There Isn't any doubt the doe population will build up too high and a few will have to be harvested, but that will be a few years if all doe killing is stopped now. When the deer population builds up too high and some docs need killing, then 1 would suggest doe tags be Issued In the handicapped. the old timers with pioneer licenses, and the youngsters who are hunting for the first j time. If there isn't enough of i these persons lo keep the dei-r population In "back-down" In Cuba. Had we wished to be truthful as well as charitable w would be compelled to admit that for the sake of peace the So viet Union chose to go the proverbial "extra mile." We are told that good be gets good. The Soviet Union's action has presented us with a challenge. Will we heed the invitation to change our arro gant ways, or will we con tinue in our narrow selfish ness until we meet with what has been the ultimate lot of other conceited, domineering powers in the past? Bert Harr Route 2, Box 77 Jacksonville, Ore. Smoking To the Editor: This is what the medics of the Bernarr MacFadden Foundation of New York have to say about cigarette smoking: "No its. and or butts. Here is another reason why you should give up cigarette smoking: Chronic Bronchitis. This respiratory di.sea.ic is now known to cause tissue changes and is assuming greater Importance on the list of frequent lung ailments. Serious changes in the mil-cuous-secreting glands have been shown to occur as a re sult of the disease. The cause of bronchitis is not known. yet a firm admonition not to jmoke comes first among the pres-viptions for its treat ment. The reformed smoker balance ; will tell you of the Improve- with the available food, then I nam in his respiratory issue doe lags to !ii gprirsi ; tract. ' public in reasonable nuiuuer I learned what I know about deer, not from shooting one at 40 yards, but from spending about 200 days per year in the forC3t where they live and observing the . deer numbers and also the feed for them, the wimer kill, the predatory animal kill, the poachers kill, and the docs and fawns shot in season and left for coyote feed. The game commission's ar gument isn't logical and it isn't consistent. For ti e game commission to argue In one breath that we have more deer and better hunting than ever before, then In the next breath defend themselves by saying we have less deer and we have cut the herds down to match the available food for (hem, then this I' too much for stupid minds lo swallow. Yours lor better hunting Johnle Minor, Box 12. ' Shadv Cove. Ore. Which Way To the Editor: We Ameri cans have made phenomenal advancement in some lines of physical and scientific accom plishment. Sad to say that re garding the science ot living Justly and peaceably with our frilow-ucings we are still floundering in the bow-and-arrow stage. Despite divine instructions which have been given us. who consider our selves to be a nation educated in Christian principles, we still stick lo the theory that might makes right. The Cuban crisis, where world catastrophe was so narrowly avoided, is a recent demons! ration of such a situa tion. Had we experienced a bit of charity we might have rreovnirrd Ihe fart thai In avoid world war the Soviets urnt "the extra mile'' and eliminated some Instruments of war and distraction in Cuba, the like of which we ttiMstcnllv maintain on and adjacent lo their own and Cuba's territory. nceause of the reactionary propaKunda given lo the pub lic, the prevailing sentiment among Ihe American people seems to be lhat our nation rose to great height! of glory when we forced Russia :o a It was printed in their monthly publication. The Good Health Reporter this month. Which means, smokers be ware. Yes, 1 had chronic bronchitis for two years. Quit the weed and got well. John E. Ring 1049 West Ills st. Medford. In the Day's News y FRANK JENKINS The National Association of Soil and Water Conservation Districts issues from time to time a bulletin that It calls its Tuesday Letter. The cur rent Letter contains this inter esting little item: "Like everything else, gov ernment has changed with the passing years. The U.S. De partment ot Agriculture hadn't been organised 162 years ago (when the capital of the U.S.A. was moved from Philadelphia to the new cap ital city of Washington) but five other federal departments were In business. "The Washington Daily Ad verser reported on June II, 1BO0, that the Treasury, War, Navy, Post Office and State departments had moved from Philadelphia to the new gov ernmental village on the Po tomac. Washington then had only 3.000 inhabitants, but the tolal number of govern ment employees moved into it would not swell the new capital cily't population to the bursting point. "The Treasury department then had a personnel of 89. the War department 18. Ihe Navy department 15. Ihe Post Office department 9 and the State department 7- a tolal of 118" 1IMMMMMM 11 Let s do some compar ing According to the World Al manac, Ihe TrruMiry depart ment In lilrlO had 76.011 civil ian employees, the War de partment (army only: in 1IMM) there was no Air Force) 403. R48 civilian employees, the Navy department 337. 018. the Post Office deparli'ient 433.. I'M and the Stale department 3J.783-a tolal nf 1 424.701. For purposes ot easier mm parison, let's tabulate it. The Mi CHINA, CUBA. KOREA Washington-For 1983. there la at least on fairly safe New Year's forecast. The next 12 months will tend to be dominated by events result I n g, directly or indirectly, from the deep ening rupturt between com munist China and the Soviet Mine union, ni moment, t h e experts are watching with baited breath an increasingly open and en venomed Sino-Soviet struggle for the allegiance of the Cu ban government of Fidel Cas tro. For too little attention was paid to the first phase of this struggle, during the tense weeks of the Cuban crisis. But while the world watched the Kennedy - Khrushchev con frontation, the Chinese were already hard at work, quite overtly encouraging the Cu bans to reject any agreement about Cuba reached between the Soviet boss and the American President. . SOME of the methods used can only be described as flagrant, wlien it is remember ed that China still pays lips service to the "sacred unity" of the Communist bloc. The most lavish praise of Castro was continuously mingled with reminders that the Cuban revolution was made with lit tle or no material aid from outside and with bitter de nunciations of the "capitula tionist" tendencies of the So vit'Meadership. In public, the Cuban Am bassador to Peking was osten tatiously feted. In private, he is reported to have been used as a channel for messages to Castro and his colleagues, urg ing defiance of the Soviets at every turn. In the period when the So viet Ilyushin bombers in Cuba were still in dispute between the President and Khrush chev, the Chinese apparently went lo extremes. Besides using diplomatic and propa gandists pressures, they seemingly attempted to or ganize domestic pressure on the Castro government by a mass mailing of hundreds of thousands of letters to indi vidual Cubans. The letters ar gued that the bombers should not be allowed to leave Cuba whatever the Soviets might say. .'" SUCH Is the background. In the present phase, the Cas tro government and its po litical and military adherents are said to be fairly sharply divided into three groups. The first group is pro-Soviet. Its members have swal lowed their resentment of the Soviet retreat in Cuba, and are keeping their eyes fixed on the main point-the Soviets' continuing power to give Cuba material aid, and the almost complete inability of the Chinese to do so. The second group, boiling with resentment, composed of intoxicated revolutionists, is agitating for the transfer of allegiance which the Chinese desire. Finally, a third group thinks that Cuba - will gain greater influence in Latin America by casting off all big power tics. Its members wish to take what may be called, a Yugoslav position, with spec ial emphasis on "Latin Amer ican socialism." The membership of the groups Is so misty that Che Guevara, for example, is authoritatively described both as pro-Moscow and pro-Peking. But the existence of the conflicting groups is thought to be well established. Furth ermore, the struggle ofr Cuba may now be coming to a head, with the commemoration of the anniversary of the Cuban revolution which begins on New Year's Day. The Chinese have publicly scheduled an enormous cele bration. Peking will honor Cuba for several days on end. So far as is known, no com- tabulated like this: comparison looks Treasury War Navy Post Office Stale TOTAL 18110 69 18 lf A 7 1960 76.011 40S.848 337,108 349.951 35,783 118 1,424,701 BACK In 1800, of course, our nation was very small. Its population then was onlv S.308.000. By 196(1. it had grown to 178.000,000. We must all agree that it takes more government employees In service a population of 178.000.000 than to service a population of only 3.308, 000. So let's put it this way: Back in 1800, there was one federal employee to each 44. 987 persons in the U S A. In 1960. In Iheac samt live de partments, each federal em ployee serviced onlv 123 peo- I'l' " IT any rale In these modem days We ought to be getting lot morf service parable celebration is planned in Moscow; and although something like 10,000 Russian troops remain in Cuba, the first departures have been noted. If I DEL Castro, meanwhile, has announced a major speech to be made on tht an niversary of. his revolution. Beyond much doubt, even if no final choice is revealed. the Castro speech will show whether he is leaning in a pro- Moscow direction, or in a pro- Chinese direction. Currently, a Chinese choice in Cuba is rated unlikely but not impos sible; but anything can hap pen. The fact that anything can happen has already been proven elsewhere. In North Korea, for instance, the gov ernment of Kim II Sung sent a military mission to Moscow this winter. Obviously seek ing to retain influence in North Korea, Kb rush c h e v granted the mission a large quantity, of expensive military hardware, much of which has now been delivered. Khrush chev was cheated? however. The North Korean Commu nists took a 100 per cent Chi nese satellite line at their re cent party plenum. In Viet Nam, in contrast, the Sino-Soviet struggte for influence is said to be increas ingly ferocious, but the issue is still in doubtt. This is the state of affairs, in fact, in every Communist party all over the world in which the Chines have even a toehold. For us in Amerjca, Cuba is only the most inter esting case, because it is the nearest. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris lei Fltld Enterprises, Inc. CRUEL RETIREMENT A man I know, who has been the executive officer of a large company for many years, is being "auto matl cally" retired in a few weeks, when he reaches the age of 63. It is my predic tion that he may "a u t o matically" die Harris u e i o r e n e reaches the age of 70. One of the crudest features of modern society is the com pulsory retirement of men who are still energetic and healthy. It seems unnecessary to point out that many of the world's greatest geniuses have done their best work after 65. It was in these later years that Goeihc completed his Faust, and Verdi composed his fir.cst operas, that Miciici ar.elo painlcd his most nota ble pictures. The field of sci ence and invention has many comparable cases. In the public mind, art ists are supposed to die young but actually, cre ative men tend to live long er than others. The poet, the painter, the composer never "retire." in any real sense of Ihe world, but keep working until the day of their death. With few exceptions (such as Moiart or Keats, who were racked with early ill ness), the creative artist passes into old age with less of a wrench than the man who is compelled to with draw from his lifework whether er not he wants to. Consider at random a few of th world's moil eminent wrilert all of whom were working at top tpeed (and some with increased pow ers) when death cut Ihem down: Hawthorne had two books going: "Dr. Grimshawe's Se cret" and "The Dolliver Ro mance." Conrad was involved in the middle of one nf his most promising novels, "Sus pense," when he died. Stevenson's "Weir of Her miston" breaks off in the very middle of a sentence, written on the morning of his seizure and death. Sir Waller Scott began "The Siege of Malta" a few weeks before he died. Jane Austen was writing "Sandition." Charles Dickens lett "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" unfinished. Thackeray was working on "Denis Du val." Balzac had begun "L Depute d'Areis." and Ibanez was beginning his sequel, call ed "The Fifth Horseman." Charlotte Bronte had rough ed out "Emma." Flaubert left a fragment of ' Bouvard el Pccuchet." Stendhal gave us the beginning of "Lamia." De Maupassant. Henry James, Wilkie Collins, all passed away trying lo gel completed books to their publishers. This is the way a man must live his life - "automatic" retire ment ti for automatons, not for human beings who may be entering their ripest hours at 63. Try and Stop Mo ly BENNETT CERF- SMITH AND DALE, aged 78 and 81 respectively, are a wonderful eld vaudeville team, famous principally for their "Mr. Dubious" sketch, don frequently on TV, andj always good for a hun dred belly laughs. Smith'i real name il Sultrer and Dale's is Marks, They ac quired their stage names when, at the outset of their career, they couldn't afford cards ef their own, and printer let them have for a quarter, a hundred cards reading "Smith and Dale," which a previous pure haser never had called for. "The first time we ran into each other," recalls Smith, "wag on bicycles on the lower East Side. We blamed each other. A big crowd egged in en, but we) didn't fight. If we had, somebody for sure would have grabbed our bikes. So we decided to become partners and here we are." Long may they continue! Returning front church, a mousey little lady confided to her friend, "Or. Graham kept talking about the epistles in his ser mon this morning. I'm ashamed to say that I don't know what the epistles axe." "My dear, how can you be o ignorant,' laughed her friend. "I thought everybody learned aa a child that the epistles are the wives of the apostles!" "And where did Daddikins take you thia afternoon?" a mother asked her young hopeful. "To the zoo," was the reply. "And on animal paid 122.60 for coming in third." e IKS, by Htnatlt Cart. Distributed bjr Ktas reaturct (rallcet "I Washington Report By William S. While (ei United feature Syndicate THE HOUR 15 LATE Washington-Two irreplace able values - a decent mod eration on the race issue and a high sense of public and private re sponsibility -arc about to be driven from one of the last areas in which they survive in Africa. A dec- white aae ago. tne Central African Federation, composed of Southern and Northern Rhodesia and Nyasa- land, was formed with twin motives. On the one hand It was to resist the pitiless anti Negro extremism of the Un ion of South Africa, with its doctrines of white supremacy forever. On the other hand it was to resist the irrespon sible demands of Negro na tionalist leaders for the ex tinction, all together and all at once, of thai white leader ship assistance which is abso lutely vital to any sane tran sition in Africa fron- ex-colonial to independent status. tyODAY, that federation is about to fall apart under the hammer blows of u single, merged extremism: unin formed and violent Negro na tionalism, and the excessive do-goodism of the United Na tions and the United States, which see all black leaders as all-wise and all-worthy and all whit leaders as fit only lor tne trasn pile of nist y. The beginning of the end for the federation - barring the unlikely hope that the United States might yet re verse a policy of destructive sentimentality and so give some support to responsible leadership in Africa - began a few weeks ago in Southern Rhodesia's elections. The moderate party of Sir Roy Wclensky and Sir Edgar Whitehead went down. The winning party was the white supremacy Rhodesian front -which had presented the mod erates as far too "soft" on the race question. T'HE full irony of f : defeat ran he annmplalAH nnlv when one realizes it was brought about most of all by the United Nations, which has tirelessly pursued the Wclen sky group as far too "hard" against ihe Negroe.a. T' e very party now rejected in South ern Rhodesia as too "liberal" had for years been blackened by the U.N. as too "reaction ary" for words. The white farmers of South ern Rhodesia had not found it easy in the first place to accept the Welensky-White-head leadership, which had with great courage nd con sistently, if slowly, forced im provement of the Negro's lot. Instead of fostering such lead ership, the U.N. for years has been the forum for hysteri cally absurd attacks on it -for not doing everythinj all at once and turning over the whole country, yesterday morning, exclusively to na tive tribes manifestly not yet capable of governing. At last, the Southern Rho desians had enough. So long called "enslavers," they kick ed out the moderates and went along with the extremist Rhodesian front. The dog had been given a bad name once too often. AND now that moderate gov ernment in Southern Rho desia - the heart of the fed eration - has thus been de stroyed, the British govern ment has entered to complete the destruction of the federa tion itself. Against previous pledges to the contrary, Lon don has now authorized Ny asaland to secede from the federation, in spite of the fact that Nyasaland cannot even pay its bills. The Southern Rhodesians thus face isolation in Africa. The end result (and a pretty result it will be, indeed, for the U.N.'s eager reformers:) may be a forced association with the true home of anti Negro feeling on that con tinent, the Union of South Africa. It is not easy, or popular, to try to raise a voice of rea son. For "independence" if rightly a good word. And the perversion of Independence into chaos is a specialty of the U.N., whose ms'siva propaganda, on this Issue, out shouts reason with all th ease with which it has smash ed a responsible government in Africa. But the hour is late; and a man has the duty to try. COLD SAVES WORKER Cradley Heath, England -IUPII - Construction worker Rawn Jones, 30. was saved by the cold Monday when he fell into a hopper just as ton of gravel were to pour into it. The gravel had frozen and would not pour. Li i A n n f hrH lr ,,..W!lsj-. Jt, anjvc', ,v,c4. "Meviet get dirtier, advertising gelt texiei. ctmmtt etalt get leutler either we're getting dtctemttr et I'm getting elder!"