Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 08, 1952, Image 10

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    TEN MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEiF0RDv2IWTiuBinn
Everyone In Southern Oregon
Readi Tile MalJ Tribune
Fubltihed DaUy Except Saturday by
HCtirORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-4141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
ERNEST R. GILSTRAP. Manaier
HERB GREY, Advertlilnc Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERir ALLEN JR.. Cltv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph EdIUu
RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor
nl lVK RTAnrHKR finrietv Editor
GERALD LATHAM, circulation Mgr
An Independent Newipaper
Entered as aecond elate matter at
Mediord. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Mae1 tare1 mm) JscIum Cowry Hit
tars tram Ike files e the Mail
TribuM 10. 20. 10 ins) 40 years
10 YEARS AGO
June 1. 1942
(It wag Monday)
War Production board In
creaaei allotment of gasoline for
Medford area by 50 per cent;
order expected to allow suffic
ient gasoline for Camp White
and other essential workers.
From Arthur Perry'i Ye
Smudge Pot column: Farmers
report cheat weeds are plentiful
and they have taken steps to
hornswoggle them.
20 YEARS AGO
June 8. 1932
(11 was Wednesday)
Capt. Lewis A. Yancey, pilot
on New York to Rome flight,
visits Medford to take pictures
of Crater lake from autogiro.
Secretary of state records
how 2,101 automobiles regis
tered to Medford owners for all
time high.
80 YEARS AGO
June 8. 1922
(It was Thursday)
Medford city council votes to
provide hitching rack facilities
for farmers visiting the city.
Lillian Russell, international
ly known beauty, dies at her
home in Pittsburgh.
40 YEARS AGO
Juna 8, 1912
(It was Saturday)
Benton Bowers and S. A. Carl
ton, both Ashland, file injunc
tion to stop construction of East
Main street bridge across Bear
creek in Medford.
Highcroft Heights addition
between Oregon terrace and
Barneburg road, and Oregon
avenue and Crown avenue, sold
for $50,000; building in area to
be restricted to homes costing
85,000 or more "making it the
finest residence section of the
city."
American Pilots
Hold 15 to 0
Edge
In Past Two Weeks
Seoul, Korea (U.R) Amer
ican Sabrejct pilots have shot
down 15 Communist MIG-15s in
two weeks In air battles without
a single loss of their own, the
5th Air Force reported Satur
day. The swept-wing F-88s knock
ed down seven MIGc Friday and
damaged two to make their
weekly total nine downed and
three damaged. A propellor-drlv-en
F-51 Mustang damaged
fourth. The Sabres downed six
the previous week.
, United Nations losses this
week were an F-80 Shooting
Star fighter-bomber and a T-8
Mosquito spotter plane lost to
ground fire and a B-28 light
bomber lost to undetermined
causes.
Allied and Communist ground
forces fought a series of small
scale patrol actions.
Four flights of fighter-bombers
struck the Kanggye . Hulch
on rail route in North Central
Korea Saturday. They smashed
10 bridges on the key Commun
ist supply line.
Dead line Sunday Claistfltda Is at
Boon Saturdays.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence
Washington, D.C., June 9
at "Fast Time" as the Mayor of
Our train arrived Okeh to
conference at Standard Time, but
We shall write a hot and stinging protest to the editor of the
Times and tell him just what we think of such New Deal-Fair
Deal and all around CROOKED Deal! (There won't be another for
a week, and we don't EXPECT
e a
We left Chicago yesterday afternoon on the Pennsylvania "Lib
erty Limited" which used to
country Perhaps It is yet for the
pappy!
Never have we spent such a
slide off the bed and break the editorial neck when we hit the
horseshoe curve, can't understand. There wasn't a smooth spot
from one Union station to the
a wink. (Well perhaps Just one wink or two at the most). Couldn't
shave not even with an electric razor if we had one. The
only redeeming feature is the
FRIENDLY!"
We listened to both General
his Abilene speech. We thought
have heard no criticisms except
the General was platitudinous,
he claimed that while Chief-of-Staff,
the air force to deteriorate. We
Republican." When he tries to
his time honored Old Guard political holds, he does appear pa
thetic. He might better keep his
thing to say that is of some real
It would be enlightening If
the world what 'he was doing
Staff.
Unless we are much mistaken
tic Pact, the Marshall plan and
military purposes abroad, INCLUDING those for the air force!
Those who live In glass houses,
As this is written Taft's lead
has been cut to less than 600 votes. Considering the Isolationist
conditions in that state politically, this adds up to a moral victory
for Ike. But, of course, the Taft forces will hail it as a great tri
umph for their man.
Considering the Taft record
cut contest between the two men
crowing should be expected and excused. No matter what the
margin, a primary victory is a primary victory these days, with
only a few weeks to go now before
Our guess Is the Eisenhower
more worried than anywhere else.
fessional politicians are concentrated as nowhere else. Machine
pontics are also more In evidence
in any other section of the country. Mr. Republican is the canal
date with that type of support,
cnts.
We would not advise anyone
ularly In view of the overwhelming Warren victory In California.
California may well decide the result of the Republican conven
tion as it did the Democratic convention 20 years ago.
While condemning General
tudinous" is as unfair and inaccurate as criticizing his air policies
as inadequate, we grant there was
eral's remarks. In fact, he took
dicted he would take, placing the popular demand for a change in
administration first where it should be.
That Is In fact, as we see it, the one argument In favor of a
Republican victory, which we believe even that master catch-as-catch-can
political strategist Harry S. Truman, will find It diffi
cult to combat.
In our democracy the burden
upon the supporters of ANY party that maintains that party should
enjoy UNINTERRUPTED power for MORE than 20 years.
Yes that is the one great advantage the Republicans enjoy this
year the only way they could throw It away as we see it would
be to nominate Robert Alphonso Taft! R.W.R.
Why Gen. Sherman Said It
The latest statement from Gov. Stevenson, who
previously had said he "could not accept" the Demo
cratic presidential nomination in 1952, is that it would
be "presumptuous, arrogant and conceited to say now
what I would do in the event of a drafts The persuad
ers seem to be making some progress.
a e e
TN ALL this talk of getting a candidate to say "yes"
after he had once said "no" reference is constantly
made to what Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman said
in refusing to be considered for the Republican pres
idential nomination of 1884. Sherman, in recent com
pulsory retirement from the Army on reaching 64,
wired John B. Henderson, a friend who was about to
be chosen chairman of the Republican national con
vention : "I will not accept if nominated and will not
serve if elected."
It is sometimes assumed that this meant the nom
ination was Sherman's for the asking. As a matter of
fact, he would probably have had a real tussle for it,
in view of the religious bigotry of the time.
Sherman, not himself a Catholic had been
brought up by a Catholic family after the age of nine,
when his father died. His wife was an ardent Catho
lic indeed, Sherman wrote Mrs. Henderson in 1883
that if he were President, Mrs. Sherman would prob
ably "keep the White House full of priests." His son
Tom had entered the priesthood.
a a e a a
THE newspapers reported that when Sherman was
discussed at the convention, many of the delegates
declared Ilatly that they would oppose him because
of his wife's religion. Several Protestant church pa
pers had declared editorially: "No Roman Catholic
for President." R. R.
May Street, Highway
Salem (U.R) Twenty-eight
persons lot their lives in street
and highway accidents In Ore
gon last month, a preliminary
count of May fatality reports re
ceived by Secretary of State Earl
T. Ncwbry showed.
The May toll brings the death
count for the year in Oregon so
far to 135, compared with 147
at the similar period in 1951.
Fatalities in May of last year
reached 39.
Officials said last month's
ROSE SHOW OPENS
Salem (U.R) - The Salem
Rose society opened its seventh
annual rose show Saturday In
the gymnasium of the Salem
YMCA.
Sunday, June t. 1(81
Your correspondent is just as mad
Cold Ray!
make the President's regular press
not at DST.
to be here then. CURSES!)
e e
be one of the best trains In the
younger fry. But not for Grand
night on ANY train why we didn't
other, and Ye Editor didn't sleep
Penn. R. R. doesn't call itself
Eisenhower's press conference and
both were excellent. Thus far
from Senator Taft. Taft thinks
and evasive. A few hours before,
General Eisenhower allowed
are beginning to feel sorry for "Mr.
tangle with Eisenhower and use
mouth shut unless he has some
importance.
the Senator from Ohio would tell
when the General WAS Chief-of-
he was voting against the Atlan
every increase In expenditures for
etc. etc.
over Eisenhower in South Dakota
where there has been a real clear-
in the past, a certain amount of
the finish.
forces here In Washington are
One reason is clear here pro
and more highly regarded than
far in excess of any of his oppon
-
however to sell Ike short, partic
Eisenhower's remarks as "plati
nothing unexpected In the Gen
the line your correspondent pre
of proof certainly rests heavily
Accidents Kill 28
death count may be higher if
delayed reports are received or
if persons listed as Injured later
die as the result of those injuries.
State Prison Staking
Correctional Officers
Salem (U.R) Oregon State
prison needs men and women
correctional officers, the State
Civil Service commission said
Saturday.
Applicants should have relat
ed college work or experience.
The prison also needs a wom
en's correction sergeant. The ap
plicant must have at least three
years of experience in Institu
tional work or comparable col
lege experience.
Crosstown
' ' . ' SV-eto-
"If sha asks why I didn't coma to her party, tall her f ain't
in lha habit of goin' places without an invitationl"
Matter of Fact
KEFAUVER'S PROSPECTS
Washington In the intense
excitement of the. Republican
race, people tend to forget that
the Democrats have also got to
nominate a presidential candi
date this year. But after Tues
day s voting in South Dakota
and California, the Democratic
outlook Is also extremely inter
esting.
Sen. Estes Kefauver's tri
umphs in both primaries would
normally place him well out in
the lead for the Democratic
nomination in all circumstances.
As a practical fact, however, Ke
fauver's own managers concede
that if Sen. Robert A. Taft is the
Republican choice, the Demo
cratic party is almost bound to
draft Gov. Adlai Stevenson of
Illinois. If Taft is nominated, the
surge of feeling will be too
strong, the Kefauver people ad
mit, for their own forces or for
the reluctant Illinois governor to
withstand.
a a a
fN the other hand, the Ke-
v fauverites are extremely con
ndent, and with some reason,
that their man will get the Dem
ocratic nomination if Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower is the
Republican choice. Nor are they
at all discontented by this sec
ond-best outlook. They have al
ready parlayed a television repu
tation Into a major presidential
candidacy. With a bit more par
laying, and a lot of emphasis on
Gen. Eisenhower's domestic con
servatism, they think Kefauver
may even be elected.
The way they figure the Sen
ator's chances for the nomina
tion Is simple enough. They
think he will go into the Demo
cratic convention with close to
400 delegates, which will be a
lot more delegates than any one
else. Most of these, moreover,
will be faithful supporters. The
Kefauver delegate slates have
b'?n recruited from the politi
cal Adullamites. Most of them
have no other allegiance, and
few of them have enough inde
pendent standing to start trading
on their own.
.a a
rPHE Senator's strategists .tig-
ure, further, that both Gov.
Stevenson and President Tru
man will be unavailable, even
for a draft, if General Eisenhow
er is the Republican choice. They
do not fall into the common error
of thinking the Illinois governor
fears to run against the general.
They know, rather, that Steven
son is strictly a middle-of-the-
road Democrat, who cannot wage
the kind of straight left-wing
campaign that will be needed
against Eisenhower.
As for the president, he refus
ed the invitation of Democratic
National Chairman Frank Mc-
Kinney to keynote the conven
tion, for the specific reason that
he did not want any draft-Tru
man talk to get started. Although
delegate himself, the presi
dent docs not plan to attend the
uemocrauc rally until some one
has been named to succeed him.
Then, as he has said, he will only
appear to "deliver the valedic
tory," And in the last fortnight,
when pressed by National Chair
man McKlnney and New York
State Chairman Paul Fitipatrick.
Truman has sworn he would not
accept a draft under any circum
stances. see
BECAUSE of his previous re
verses, Sen. Robert Kerr Is
also crossed off as at best a
Vice-Presidential possibility. If
Kerr, Truman and Stevenson are
thus discounted, only two major
candidates are left among the
Democrats. These are Sen. Rich
ard Russell, who cannot get
Northern support, and W. Aver
ell Hartiman. a late entry, not
taken seriously as yet by many
Democratic leaders, and poison
to the Southerners because of
his forthright pro-New Deal-Fair
Deal-civil rights stand.
In this situation, the Kefauver
strategists think that the real
danger to their man will come
from such presently inactive
candidates as Vice-rreiident
By KoJand Co
by Joseph Also
ben Barkley and Speaker of the
House Sam Rayburn, If they
could each remove a decade
from their ages, both Rayburn
and Barkley would be leading
Presidential possibilities already,
The widespread hatred of Sen.
Kefauver, both among Demo
cratic Congressional leaders and
organization chieftains, might
well cause the convention to
name either Barkley or Rayburn
as a "caretaker candidate
against Eisenhower. Vice-President
Barkley has hopefully in
vited just such a development,
by persuading the Kentucky
Democrats to name two Negroes
and three labor leaders as Ken
tucky delegates-at-large a truly
remarkable development. But
the Kefauver managers point out
that if the Democrats make the
Barkley-Rayburn type of choice,
it will only be because dislike
for Kefauver Is so strong among
the senior men in the party.
a a a
rpHEY point out further than
- when the chips are down,
most people refuse to cut off
their noses In order to spite their
faces. They argue, therefore,
that Sen. Kefauver's power as a
vote-getter will bring the con
vention around in the end.
There are some indications al
ready, moreover, that this anal
ysis is correct. Fitzpatrick of
New York, for instance, has
been giving little hints that he
will begin to' think about Ke
fauver if the Harriman candida
cy fails, and there have been
similar hints in New Jersey.
Just one big Northern state
breaking to him should be
enough to put Kefauver over. In
short, always assuming the Re
publicans do not name Taft, the
Kefauver hopes are now very
high.
(Copyright, 1952
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
Congressional Quiz
Questions and Answers on What
Goes on at the Capital, Furnlshert
by Congressional Quarterly News
Features.
By Congressional Quarterly
1. Q I've heard about a tax
deduction plan to help Con
gressmen make ends meet.
What',s it all about?
A. The House May 15 ap
proved and sent to the Senate an
amendment to let Congressmen
deduct Washington living ex
penses from their income tax.
Rep. John W. McCormick (D.-
Mass.) said this would remove
a "discrimination" against Con
gressmen, since other taxpayers
can deduct expenses while away
from home on business. Senate
GOP leader Styles Bridges (R.,-
N.H.) believed most Senators
favored the provision, but with
a limit "so a fellow couldn't
write off a 1500-a-month apart
ment.
2. Q Has Congress ever set
tled the civil rights controver
sy?
A. No. The issue of equal
rights for racial and religious
minorities has been simmering
for nearly a century. Some of
t h e legislation Congressmen
have debated and voted on, with
out final decision, would ban the
poll tax, lynching, job discrim
ination, and segregation in the
armed services. Two of the is
sues were settled to an extent
when the President ordered a
no-discrimlna'lon policy for fed
eral job hiring and a military
anti-segregation policy.
3. Q What sort of a control
bill did the Senate Banking
committee approve?
A The bill it approved May
21 would permit wage and price
controls until next March 1 and
extend credit and rent controls
and allocations of scarce mater
ials until June 30, 1953. It
would continue the Capehart
and Herlong amendments pro
viding for upward price revis
ions, set up a new wage policy
board, relax curbs on dairy pro
duct imports, and advise the
1 tcvcrrmcnt to end controls
Al-'ioon as possible.
as
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS .
I liked Ike's speech.
I liked it, I suppose, because
he put into words nearly all the
things I've been thinking about
what's wrong with our country
But chiefly, I'm sure, I liked it
because of the strong feeling it
inspired in me that HE MEANS
EVERYTHING HE'S SAYING.
That he isn't just saying it for ef
fect.
If there is any one thing we
need more than anything else, it
is FAITH in our leadership. Af
ter that comes faith in ourselves
and FIGHTING faith in the
rightness of our motives and our
ideals.
I haven't had that kind of
faith for a long, long time. Ike
restored it to me. I came out of
Our radio room after listening to
him with the feeling that grave
as our problems are we'll meet
them and solve them and come
out of it all right.
rTHAT'S THE effect his speech
had on me. I hope and am in
clined to believe it had the same
effect on a lot of people. If our
faith can be restored, there is
NOTHING we can't do.
A NOTHER though was in my
" mind as I listened to him.
It ran something like this:
IKE WROTE THAT SPEECH
HIMSELF.
I'm tired and sick of ghost
written speeches. I grant that
great actors are great men. But
actors and leaders of whole peo
ples have different jobs. An ac
tor's job is to be a perfect mir
ror for someone else. By his per
sonality, by his voice, by his
mannerisms he gives life to what
SOME OTHER MAN has thought
and said.
When the great leader of a
great people speaks, he must
SPEAK FOR HIMSELF if his
words are to put fire and faith
into his followers. I just can't
believe that can be done by
somebody who is merely mouth
ing words that have been writ
ten by somebody else.
T ISN'T my job here to tell
what Ike said. Thanks to the
amazing perfection of modern
communications, everybody has
already heard what he said, or
has read It. All I'm trying to do
is to describe the effect It had on
me.
Its effects was to restore my
morale. It restored my morale,
I'm sure, because it restored my
faith. It Is TRUE that faith can
move mountains.
npO THOSE of us who believe
in Ike and who are FOR him
because we believe in him, his
speech to the home folks in Abi
lene brought no surprises. It re
vealed him as just the kind of
man we thought he is.
He believes, for example, that
one party has been in power too
long. Sound educational train
ing and wide experience have
taught him that too much power
held in too few hands too long
is disastrous to the rights of the
people.
He believes that inflation,
which amounts merely to kid
ding ourselves about the rela
tionships of money and proper
ty, is a cruel delusion. He knows
that the power to tax is the
POWER TO DESTROY, and he
knows that "elimination of
waste, duplication and extrava
gance" is the only way to keep
taxes' reasonable.
He knows that CONCENTRA
TION of power is dangerous, es
pecially when it is concentrated
at a point remote from the mass
es of the people, and he believes
that if concentration of power is
to be broken up as much of gov
ernment as is possible must be
brought back to the state houses,
the court houses and the city
halls.
He knows that, if the confi
dence of the people Is to be held
by the leaders of the people, the
people must be told simply and
truthfully, without evasion,
equivocation or mental reserva
tion, what is going on.
THAT IS the kind of man Ike s
speech at Abilene revealed
him to be. That Is the kind of
man I think we need as our lead
er NOW.
REACTIONS to his speech
"weren't all favorable. What
4. Q Does a Congressman
have to live in the district he
represents?
A No. The only require
ments for a U. S. Representative,
as set forth in the Constitution,
are: Residence in the state rep
resented, U. S. citizenship for
seven years, and 25 years of age.
5. Q Just what does a Con
gressman do?
A A first term Congressman,
Rep. Edmund P. Radwan (R
N.Y.), sized up his job this way.
He should study bills (there are
thousands each session, listen to
House debates, attend Commit
tee meetings and take care of a
large volume of office work. Al
so, his vast amount of mail
some taking sides on bills, some
making requests requires
study, replies and often visits to
government agencies. In addi
tion, be tries to help many veter
ans who bring him their prob
lems. (Copyright 1952,
Congressional Quarterly)
Pinay's Get Toucjh'
Policy Against Reds
Features Week's News
By PHIL NEWSOM
United Press Foreign Analyst
The week's balance sheet be
tween the good and bad news in
the hot and cold wars:
THE GOOD
1. French Premier Antolne Pi-
nay's "get tough" campaign with
the French Communists was in
full swing, . and Communist at
tempts to retaliate with strikes
to tie up transport and other vi
tal services were a dismal fail
ure. Communist attempts to take
over the government-owned Re
nault plant in Paris was met by
the workers themselves, who
tossed the Reds out. The general
result was a blow to Communist
prestige throughout W eis t e r n
Europe.
Satellites Restless
2. Meanwhile, there were con
tinuing signs of restlessness in
side -the Russian satellite states.
The latest purge hit Ana Pauker,
Romanian foreign minister who
once was the highest ranking
woman member of the Commu
nist party. At least temporarily,
she keeps her government job
but was fired from the Politburo
and the Central Committee Sec
retariat. The Reds said that man
nish Ana Pauker had become
too luxury-loving. But it also
might mean further evidence of
rising Titoism inside the Com
munist party.
3. A new premier took over
the government of Indo-China.
New Premier N'Guyen Van Tam
promised all-out efforts to crush
the Communists and clean up the
Vietnamese administration. It
seemed to portend recognition
that the war belonged just as
much to Indo-China as the
French. It was good news that
some of the French burden in
the Indo-China war might be
eased.
he said brought from Represent
ative Carroll Reece, of Tennes
see (who has been responsible
for a lot of the things that have
been wrong with the leadership
of the Republican party' this
cynical crack:
"It looks like he's pretty much
for Mother, home and heaven."
That is all right with me. Af
ter what has been going on in
this country too long, we can
use a lot more of Mother, home
and heaven without suffering
any harm.
2 MORE
Funds invested here by
Jane 10th will earn divilr
dends from Jane 1st
Current
Dividend
Rare
3
Jackson County Federal
Savings and Loan Association
126 EAST MAIN
"LfMskt lilt tits ateaseseaaa.'.
Jor9enien t Homoo,cnmd Multi
You may get a cash loan on your salan
here quickly and privately, on the friendly
basis that made Oregon Finance Co. th
choice of hundreds of persons. You don'f.
have to ask others to sign with you'here
Friends or employers not notified.
Oregon Finance Co,
Criteria.) Bldg. 43 South
Lie. S-211
THE BAD
1. West Berlisi citizens were
kidnaped and hauled off to the
Russian-control! ed Eastern zone,
and an Ameri can soldier was
wounded whilei on duty, by a
bullet fired by an East German
policeman. The incidents, while
comparatively small, were evi
dence of the powderkeg situation
set up by West C3ermany's new
alliance with the West, and Rus
sia's retaliatory "creeping block
ade" of Berlin..
2. An internal political situa
tion in South Korea threatened
further difficulties for United
Nations forcas attempting to
reach an armisitice in the Korean
war. It appeared that only a
strong note fro m President Tru
man had prevented South Ko
rean President Syngman Rhee
from dissolving the South Ko
rean Parliamerkt which opposes
him, and perhatie even from pull
ing South Korrjan troops out of
the front line ttrt help enforce his
martial law. J
Reds Not Wealtsning-
3. At Panmunjom, Communist
truce negotiators showed no
weakening in their demands for
return of all war prisoners and
continued o maike propaganda
hay out of charges of UN mis-,
treatment of Hed prisoners on
Koje Island. The Reds refused
either to reacH a truce agree
ment or to agWie to a recess of
the Panmunjom meetings. It
seemed they deliberately were
trying to force the United Na
tions into the position of break
ing off the talks
-I
Three-Ton Shortcake
Divided at Lebanon
Lebanon (U.R). Lebanon.
the land of th6 biggest straw
berry shortcake on earth, ended
up Its two-day Strawberry Festi
val Saturday with a children's
parade, auto races, folk dancing
and public strecit dancing.
I he huge stirawberry short-.
cake was cut Firlday and hun
dreds of visitors -indulged in gen
erous portions. The giant pastry
weighed nearly three tons
5400 pounds.
WINS FFA AWAUD
Salem (U.R) Don natt
of Salem won the Future Farm
er of America trophy at the Wil
lamette vallev Glierncev ahnur
the state fairgrounds here Fri-
day.
MEDFOKD, ORE.
C A a.a l a., Ja""""""
- Virimin, Murri-Minerel .Milk!"
LOANS
For Seasonal 'Shopping
To Pay Up OM Bills
Central Phone 2-4433
M-217
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