rOUTt MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MedfordITribunb
"Everybody iu Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY, Advertising Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN, Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STAR CHER, Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3, 1897
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
IassochtiIon
Flight or Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 11, 1945
(It was Sunday)
Mrs. G. Q. D'Albini, president
of Jackson County Lincoln club,
to preside at annual Lincoln
day banquet at Holland hotel;
speaker to be David B. Simp
son of Portland.;'
From Arthur Perrv's ; Ye
Smudge Pot column: Crows are
more plentiful than last year in
the rural regions, biologists re
port. Defeated. - candidates did
not eat as many of them as us
ual. 20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 11, 1935
(It was Monday)
Ralph Cowgill, County Lin
coln club president, to preside
, at annual Lincoln day banquet
at Lithia hotel in Ashland;
speaker to be J. W. Mclnturff,
Marshfield. .
Fred Colvig, Medford student
at University of Oregon school
of journalism, , has one of top
scores in American Council pf
Education test given by Dean
Eric W. Allen.
SO YEARS AGO .
Feb. 11, 1925
(It was Wednesday)
Lincoln club president C. E.
Gates to preside at annual Lin
coln day banquet at Medford
hotel with Arthur I. Moulton,
Portland, as featured speaker;
three Civil war veterans slated
-to attend.
Medford grocery firm of War
ner, Wortman and Gore sold to
Klamath Falls man after con
ducting business for 30 years in
Medford.
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 11, 1915 v
(It . was Thursday) '
" Col. H. H. Sargent, head of
local Bull Moosers, and George
P Putnam, secretary of Gover
nor Withycombe, among speak
ers slated for annual Lincoln
day banquet at Medford hotel.
From the Local and Personal
column: A new pianola for the
Company Seven club srooms is
on the way from the east, and
rolls for the last popular music
is being secured.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Chairman of - our Joint
Chiefs of Staff is Admiral Rad
ford," Gen. Ridgway, Admiral
Carney, Gen. Twining, Gen.
Gruenther or Gen. Collins?
2. Legalization of bingo in
N. Y. state is urged by the Re
publicans but not by the Demo
crats there, by the Democrats
but not by the Republicans, by
both or by neither?
3. Has there ever been an
English-born Pope?
'4. Which one of these gets
the highest . salary, or do they
all get the same: Viee-President
Nixon, Defense Secretary Wil
son, Chief Justice Warren?
5. Recent immigrants can't
get naturalized as U. S. citizens
unless they can read and write
simple English; right or wrong?
6. Curling, game played on
ice,is especially popular in Ire
land, Scotland, Wales. Norway
or Switzerland?
7. De Benneville Bell is N. Y.
Stock Exchange president, head
of the Bell telephone system,
National Football League com
missioner, or publisher of Social
Registers?
The Answers: 1. Admiral Rad
ford. 2. By both. 3. Yes. Adrian
IV in the 12th century. 4. The
Vice-President. 5. Right. 6. Scot
land. 7. National Football
Commissioner.
Ply Makers to Boom Sales
The hip- sales uromotion campaign hems under
taken by the Western fir
of more than passing interest locally in view ol re
ppntlv announced nlans for installation of two more
plywood plants here. The
sociation representing uregon, wasnmgton and Cal
ifornia's 97 fir plywood mills, which produce 75 per
cent of the nation's panels, expects to spend at least
$2,500,000 in expanding fir plywood markets this
year.
The campaign will add impetus to an industry
which has seen its product zoom to leadership among
building materials in the comparatively short time
since the war. Per capita consumption of plywood
has been boosted from under ten square feet to more
than 23 square feet, far outstripping rising population
trends.
HEART of the promotion will be the offering of
ideas for building or remodeling with plywood,
with designs prepared by five of the nation's top
flight architects. The industry will preview them with
all the drama of a new picture "opening" in mid
June. The presentation will take place in Portland
where the first fir plywood was'produced for exhibit
at that city's world fair in 1905 It will be the big
gest meeting of plywood business people ever held.
Other promotional angles include a test program
designed to evaluate' the effectiveness of plywood
sales helps at six representative lumber yards strate
gically .located across the country. Dealers will be
given more promotion support from representatives
of the plywood industry than ever before and the
force has been more than doubled with a present to
tal of 27 field promotion representatives stationed in
every major market area in the country. r
i
THE plywood industry is hopeful that the sales ef-
A forts will push sales this year well past the four
billion foot mark, an increase of about 10 per cent.
Despite a 12-week strike in mid-summer, affect
ing 50 per cent of industry production, 1954 sales of
fir plywood reached 3,800,000,000 feet, which was
four per cent better than 1953, the previous record
high. 1 : . - ; ' ;y'.':--r:."
At present the plywood makers are well situated
in the matter of orders their books showing calls for
536,000,000 feet. With the exception of several temp
orary peaks just prior to Christmas, this is the larg
est order file on" record. E.C.F.V r .
All In Scout Movement Rate Bow
1 It may be doubted that, back in 1908, Sir Robert
Baden-Powell had much hope that the Boy Scout
mpvement which-he was then founding would ever
attain the world-wide growth and importance since
witnessed. ,
This week the Boy Scouts of , America are cele
brating the 45th anniversary of the movement in this
country. The American
was formed in 1910 with
Scout commissioner and
22,000,000 boys and adult
Scouting. Today 3,660,000 are actively ; enrolled in
the various categories, Scouts, Cubs, Explorers and
adult leaders.
"117HILE the youngsters are taking a bow, this week
Y is also a good time for a word of appreciation
for those dedicated adults who "since Baden-Powell
and Beard have given time and effort to keeping the
Scout movement alive and
Consider the Scout leaders who invite pneumonia
and nervous prostration by accompanying a troop of
active bovs on weekend campinsr trips : the den
mothers who bake cookies,
fice the home furniture to
mittee members who take
ules to give the endeavor
It Can be said, of course, that adults enjoy these
contributions to the Scout movement. But their great
est pleasure is often more in retrospect than m prac
tice. It is4he pleasure of work well done: of a prod
uct achieved as a result of
training. ,
These adults rate praise
the vision which enables them, to see in their youthful
charges material which can give our nation strength.
E.C.F.
The Coed and the Prince
t Unless sne has a rich and indulgent papa, or
money of her own to fling around as she pleases,
we can't figure out how Jo Ann Stork, the Univer
sity of Illinois coed managed that flight to Europe
for a tete-a-tete with Prince Rainer III of Monaco.
Jo Ann, according to the press associations which
duly chronicled her trip with word and picture,
didn't know the prince, had never even seen him, in
fact It seems she had read a magazine article which
said his royal highness enjoyed - discussing youth
problems with young people. So, she being a young
person, Jo Ann just up and took off for glamorous
Monte Carlo where the prince holds forth.
THE royal household took a dim view of the pil-
primage when the young lady first arrived on
the scene, and Jb Ann herself told waiting reporters
she was afraid some might think she was husband
hunting. - : . r. ; v'-: 'A -'. r . v : - - 0:
But a palace seance was later arranged and, pre
sumably, she and the prince had a real nice chat. We
hope she found it worth the couple of grand it must
have cost someone. E.C.F. ' -: - - - 3
Friday, February 11, 1955
plywood manufacturers is
Douglas Fir Plywood as
branch of the organization
Dan Beard as first national
since that time more than
leaders have taken part in
active.
plan activities and sacri
the pack; and the com
time from crowded sched
cohesion and purpose.
mental, moral and physical
' r?
for their labors, and for
Restless Fascists in
Italy Seeking Strong
Man for Leader Role
Pg 4 RESTLESS 2col hed ..
Editor's note: The following spec
ial dispatch is a substitute for Charles
m. Mccann's foreign news commen
tary. By ALDO FORTE
United Press Correspondent
Rome j(U.R) Italy's restless,
latter-day Fascists are casting
about for a strong man. What
they want, specifically, is some
one with the color and showy
personality of a new Mussolini.
Ever since the death of Mar
shal Rodolfo Graziani, the last
hero of the sword-rattling Mus
solini era, the MSI the Neo
Fascist Italian Party has been
in serious need of a new and
dramatic figurehead.
The specifications are fairly
clear. The man for the job must
be able to rally the restless die
hards of pre-war Fascism, the
boisterous youths and the nu
merous disgruntled Italians who
have no stomach for the present
predominantly Catholic democ
racy which has been running
the country since the end of
World War II. r
The party itself is a going
concern. In the most recent elec
tions it elected 29 deputies and
nine senators.
Spark Missing
Trouble is, they're by and
large a colorless lot. None has
the spark necessary to ignite
real enthusiasm. The only man
within their ranks who had
what it takes was Graziani, and
he was so thoughtless of the
party as to die last January.
The men that remain are not
in The Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
At his news conference this
week, President Eisenhower
says the shake-up in Russian
leadership doesn't necessarily
mean , that the Kremlin has em
barked on a calculated tougher
policy toward the United States.
He said the developments in
Russia reflect internal dissat
isfaction. ASKED by a reporter about
"the shooting down of an
American plane by Communist
anti-aircraft fire. Ike replied
that the plane, as he put it,
"got a little lost and wandered
into a bad area." ,
REMEMBER Teddy Roosevelt's
advice to "speak' softly and
carry a big stick?" f ' ;
Ike's following it.
In his answers to the report
ers at his press conference, he
was speaking softly.
The huge American 7th fleet,
deployed in the Formosa straits,
is the big stick. .
TN Washington, two senators
speak up to dispute the Rus
sian claims of atomic suprem
acy. Senator Henry Jackson of
Washington and Senator Roarke
Hickenlooper of Iowa both said
they believe the U.S. is well out
in front in the field of atomic
weapons.
TN this connection, I'd like to
-quote a "bit of valuable advice
given to me in my younger and
more hair-trigger days by a wise
and blunt-spoken old gentle
man: "Keep your shirt on, kid.
NEVER ENGAGE IN A POLLU
TION CONTEST WITH A
SKUNK."
I commend his.counsel to Sen
ators Jackson and Hickenlooper.
WHEN Malenkov (he's sup
. . posed . to pronounce it Mal-yen-koff)
resigned as Soviet pre
mier, he said he would be given
another job. As it turns out, he
has been assigned two jobs
deputy premier and minister of
power stations.
T WOULDN'T be' surprised if
the undertaker (if they have
such things in Russia) gets an
other job soon. People who lose
out in a Kremlin ruckus : never
seem to live long.
OREGON'S Senator Neuberg
er, who is a member of the
TEETH WENT. TOO
New Bedford, Mass. U.R)
Louis Xifras of New Bedford
discovered too late he had tossed
the wrong half of an orange he
was eating out a bus window.'
Xifras' lower plate had stuck in
the discarded half. ' ,
v
2 31
i t PORK .1 .
LIVER
I ilk m
all newcomers. Many were
forced into political retirement
after the war and returned only
in 1952 when the so-called
"Nazi Law' which banned Fas
cists from government posts, ex
pired. That brought a number
of them scurrying home from
"diplomatic" vacations abroad
and others emerged from the
underground.
Included in their number
were such men as Filippo An
fuso, Italy's last Fascist ambas
sador to Berlin, Lando Ferretti,
a general of the Fascist Militia
and a member of Mussolini's
Grand Council, and Araldo
Crollalanza, Mussolini's minis
ter of public works.
Big. 'Names' Gone
But all lack popularity in
Italy and their names had al
most been forgotten even by the
old-time Fascists. They meant
nothing to the .younger hot
heads. Many of Fascism's best known
and most feared names vanish
ed in prisons, before firing
squads or came to similar ends
soon after the war ended.
But the name Mussolini still
is; around Vittorio Mussolini
the 38-year-old son of the late
dictator. But he never was
popular and now is a successful
import-export manager in Bue
nos Aires.
The plain fact of the matter
would seem to be that Fascism
has neither the leaders nor the
program to attract any large or
enthusiastic following in Italy
today. And there are few who
grieve over the fact.
Mews
senate sub-committee on roads,
announces in Washington that
he opposes the toll road finan
cing features of President Eisen
hower's $101,000,000,000 high
way program.
He says the toll road provi
sions of the bill discriminate
against large, thinly populated
states such as Oregon. He adds
that Oregon might be tempted
to take the economic risk in
volved in building a toll road
in order to be able to qualify
for a federal highway grant to
be used elsewhere in the state.
WELL: Well: On this point, at
least,' I find myself in com
plete agreement with Senator
Neuberger. 1
In - this world, you never can
tell what will happen.
Oil Fluoridation
To the Editor: We would, ap
preciate very much having the
attached article, taken from a
Los Angeles paper inserted in
the Mail Tribune, as we feel it
would be of interest to the peo
ple of Medford:
Fluoridation Ruled Illegal
The City Council of Shreve
port, La., adopted a resolution
authorizing fluoridation of the
public water supply. There
upon a group of citizens pe
titioned the Court to issue a
preliminary writ of injunc
tion. The plaintiffs contended
that the City Council had no
authority to fluoridate the
public water supply. The
Court' upheld this assertion,
c-bserving "that there was no
specific statute or constitu
tional provision conferring
upon the City the authority
to fluoridate the water sup-
ply. Further, the Court con
cluded that the matter of per
sonal . dental health and hy
giene was for each to decide .
for themselves and the pow
ers of the government did not
extend to such jurisdiction.
Judge James Galloway ruled
that fluoridation of public wa
ter supplies is illegal.
It is encouraging to know
that San Diego, Calif., after
using Fluorine in its water -for
three years voted it out.
"Facts . you should know
about Fluoridation" may be
obtained by sending ten cents
to:
Citizens Against Mass . Flu
oridation, 4103 Park Blvd.,
San Diego 3, Calif., U.S.A.
C. J. Haas, .
802 W. 11 Street,
Medford, Ore.
Frank Howell,
205 Laurel Street,
Medford, Ore. -
EAST SIXTH ST
VEAL
ROAST
communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a 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.
Who Has The Answer?
To the Editor: The admission
of General Douglas MacArthur
that peace will not come by war
is certainly a change of heart.
If we remember correctly it has
not been long since he was
saying that there was no sub
stitute for victory, and victory
beyond the Yalu., It took him
quite a spell to make up his
mind. '
Thirty years ago another Gen
eral fessed up. General Billy
Mitchell said: "There is no
safety in arms. Peace is not
possible as long as our enemies
can duplicate our weapons.
When the atomic bomb be
came a reality, then Franklin
D. Roosevelt saw the hand writ
ing on the wall and threw in
the towel. He said: "There is no
safety in arms. If we depend
upon arms for our safety, every
flower of culture will be
trampled under -foot."
Forty-two years ago, while
Mr. Eisenhower was still a ca
det at West Point, and while big
Bill Knowland and , Admiral
Radford were playing ball on
the back lot, World War I Pres
ident Woodrow Wilson said:
"All wars -are for commercial
reasons. They are fomented and
carried on by a few big indust
rialists and a handful of dom
inant men. There . will never be
peace as long as the power to
make war is centered in the
hands of so few.'"
A noted author and a former
member of the British parlia
ment Frances Neilsen had his
say: "Wars are a result of sec
ret diplomacy. The fate of the
world is decided behind closed
doors, in a room filled with
smoke from big black cigars."
The sincerity and intelligence
of all these men cannot be ques
tioned. They point to the hor
rors of war but no solution is
offered. Who has the answer?
Earl Allen,
Rt. 1, Medford,
Medford, Ore.
Again, Fluoridation
To the Editor: Again the in
sidious fluoridation tries o slip
in under the cloak of respecta
bility.
Within a series of articles by
the Mail Tribune publicizing Na
tional Children's Dental Health
Week, competently outlining the
serious dental problem, there is
sidious fluoridation tries to slip
day, of a phony-sounding sci
entists find" type of generalize
tion, again leading one to sus
pect this article has been planted
amidst this series with tones of
a much graver implication.
"Scientists have repeatedly
underscored the fact that not
a single objection to the pro
gram has withstood the test pf
scientific investigation" the
report sizes all "up nicely for us.
A now well-known saying to the
effect that a statement repeated
often enough becomes believed,
finds a fit here.
The fact that fluoridation is
not being conducted from the
sugar bowl or dispensed from
the soft-drink bottles is not be
ing sympathized with at present
About fluoridation "tests":
Why the continual insistence
by these proving groups that
comparisons be made with nat
urally-found fluorine waters
(containing calcium fluoride),
when it is the artificially pro
duced chemical by-product (so
dium fluoride) that is the more
obnoxious 85 times more so;
and it is : the latter compound
that is being used in city water
systems? An outstanding con
fusion for a "scientist" to "in
dulge in, for one thing.
Then, even, taking the more
naturally fluorine type of, water,
from the Archives of PMiatrics
we have this:
". . . dental condition known
as 'mottled teeth' . . . For a dec
ade . :. . public health research-1
ers . . . sougni . . . means to de
vise ' methods' for - removal of
fluorine or mitigation of its toxic
effects in domestic water sup
plies." Again:
". . . subjects who have been
using naturally fluoridated wa
ter for several decades . . . found
appalling periodontal (gum) dis
ease . . . indicating premature
aging" of the tooth structure,
making extractions very ; diffi
cult . . . Many of these cases had
. . . premature need for den
tures." ' The average reader glimpsing
through the paper and at a re
port the type which we are talk
ing about, will not find the tech
nical facts. 'Presentations of
SCEPSIS
BEEP I MUTTON-
STEAK. ROAST
careful, patient, impartial in
vestigators who have no undue
influence pushing them, or as
sociations to rain views in a
planned campaign across the na
tion, seldom are heard. Real
facts are not presented for such
ready-assimilation; the informed
reader will have to arrange for
these, this is the real education.
As a qualified speaker told a
group here just Monday night,
to quote from the Tribune:
. . . truth is not necessarily
what is popular truth is not
necessarily supported by the
majority . . . it is not necessarily
even thought of yet."
J. R. W.
(Name on File)
The Good We Do
To the Editor: My wife's fav
orite comment is: The good we
do will never die. Somewhere,
sometime, it will be appreciated.
Her prophecy was made good
when an old schoo'jnate finally
located me. At the supper-table
he told how for more than three
score years he had hoped and
planned to find and thank me
for protection given him and
his small brother when starting
school in a strange neighbor
hood. That he and his brother,
lived in my shadow." outside
the school room. .
To me, a bully or hazing-gang
are awfully low-down tritters,
So, the school bully dared me
down to the back yard where
such affairs were settled, for
interfering with his "fun." We
sparred and dared and called
names, he having some advan
tage by spitting tobacco juice
at my bare-feet. This, on call of
the school-bell ended in a flurry
of fists, mostly coming my way.
It ended, as quickly, he scurry
ing home across the road.'. A
cut lip, split ear, also a skin
ned knuckle were my "injuries."
But my opponent, showing up
late, had a puffed nose and
blood streaks ; on his " shirt
front, also a beautiful pancake
size black eye of . which, for
some odd reason, he seemed to
be most proud. .
But my- small triumph was
short, for his younger brother
and a tough kid from "out west,'
ganged; up on me when alone,
the brother set a pup-dog snap
ping at my shanks while the
western kid sniik up behind and
with one arm in a strangle hold,
he worked my face over .with
the other to which my broken
and deformed nose bears mute
testimony. "
Later on our old home burned
and me adrift in a strange school
a hazing-gang was beaten .off
with a .baseball bat swinging
from my long skinny arms. That
got me into more trouble. So
my schooling ended there in
the 6th grade. Sanctuary . was
found in the pine woods of
northern Michigan where
ham-sized fisted bunk-mate pro
tected me from the camp bully,
And a half century later as field
editor for the Timberman mag
azine, in making the , logging
camps of the six western states
not one camp bully was found
showing how the logging fra
ternity has progressed in human
decency, that certain other in
stitutions could well copy.
F. J. Clifford
1211 W. Main
.Medford, Ore.
RICHER
IfJSTMTLV
..yet you save 3 ways!
1
WHBf YOU MY IT, you pay leas
than for other top quality Instant
coffee and much leas than for
regular coffee. ;
WHEN YOU MAKI IT, you use less
because Edwards is 100 pure
2
coffee rich coffee from
eboi
coffee beans, "Deep Roasted?
3
WHm you fa vi it there's not a
drcqs of waste. You make exactly .
what you want-when you want it.
Featured at SiiPSJAI?
Praise For Perry '
To the Editor: This is a conv
of a letter sent to the Phoenix
City Council: ' We were sorry to
read in the Mail Tribune of the
suspension of Phoenix Police
Chief Jim Perry.
We live outside of the city
limits, but our Children attend
the Phoenix schools, and we are
also there frequently for club
meetings and other activities.
Our boys belonged for two years
to the Gun club to which Mr.
Perry gave so much of his time
and interest, . in order that the
young folks . could learn gun
safety under supervision in
stead of shooting out windows
and street lights. Mr. Perry also
cooperated in the driver train
ing program in the. high school,
which all authorities agree is
the answer to teen-age reckless
ness. It appears to us that Jim
Perry is one of the best police
officers Phoenix has had in the
years we . have been around
town, and that he is trying to
do a good job for both the young
people and the adults.
It is to be expected that he
would make mistakes and anger
some people, but wouldn'tf it be
wise to think of his good quali
ties as well instead of being so
quick to condemn?
Can Phoenix be sure of eet-
ting a replacement as good on
the wnole as Jim Perry for the
salary the town is able' to pay?
we know nothing about the
true facts of the present con
troversy, one hears so :many
things; but - certainly it is not
wise to do anything hasty with
out a thorough investigation
and weighing the good against
the bad. None of us is perfect.
. In regard to the bail receipt
mentioned in the paper, if you
have ever kept office records,
you know how easy it is to over
look something, or make a mis
take.' We would not condone
fraud, but one error does not
made a person dishonest. If the
accountants find evidence of
wrongdoing that is something
else again, but let's be careful
about jumping to conclusions
when a man's reputation and
livelihood are at stake. ;
From outside looking . in, it
seems to us that Jim Perry was
doing a good job of law enforce
ment for the community of
Phoenix. -''
: Mr. and Mrs. Lawson Scott Jr.
' Rtl . 3, Box 240-C, --',
Medford, Oregon :
ALL FOR THE CAUSE
Kaiserlautern, Germany JQJ.fi)
Opposite musical tastes of. GI
units made the local U.S. Army
March of Dimes drive $919 rich
er. An engineer company con
tributed $419 to the polio fund
to hear an Army radio disc jock
ey play,; "Shake, Rattle and
Roll." An anti-aircraft battalion
contributed $500- to have him
stop playing the number. - - '-.
NOW
IS THE TIME
to start building an insured
savings account with us. You
will find it pleasant and pro
fitable to invest here. ;.-
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N
of Medford '
27 North Holly ?
An Institution Dedicated -To
Thoia Who Siva
By the cup or
COFFEE