Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 01, 1955, Image 4

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    FOOT MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
frlday. April 1, 19551
MnfowvkTiiBUifi
r.vtrDoa in ioutnern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
87-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
KERB GREY. Advertising Manager
I. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. 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
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advance: Per copy 10c.
Daiy and Sunday One year $12 00
Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50
Daily and Sunday Three mos 3.50
Daily and Sunday One month 1.25
Sunday Only One year S3.50.
By Carrier In Advance Medford.
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point,
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Pnoemx.
Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent.
and on motor routes:
Daily and Sunday One year 413.00
.Daily and Sunday one montn im
Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy
All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of the Gity of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson Comty
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WESTJHOLL1DAY COMPANY. INC.
Offices in New York. Chicago. De
troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles.
Seattle. Portland. St. Louis. Atlanta.
Vancouver. B.C.
NATIONAL EDITOIIAl
assocTatiIon
NEWSPAPFI
PUKIISHIRS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
Economy Is the Issue
Water Bill Opposed
To the Editor: Would like to
call attention to a bill before the
One of-the reasons why Oregon is faced with an
estimated $60,000,000 deficit fpr the biennium start-
ting July 1 and why our lawmakers and tax experts
are casting about m all directions for possible ad
ditional revenue sources is the continual demand for Legislature entitled, House bui
m6re State Spending. No. 26. This bill concerns the
These demands cover many fields and there is no surface ground water, it is very
denying that practically all of them have at least ious' dictatorial, and sociai-
i tt j . V1 j. .j , istic in principle. If passed it will
some merit. However, a state, like an individual, must be a source o discontent among
balance spending with income, if solvency is to be au property owners outside of
preserved. Neither states nor individuals can go on the municipalities and cause
indefinitely putting out money for things it would be a Syer of
nice to nave, dm wnicn tney can not anora. salve thinking to smooth over its
1 aims and intentions
A MUJMii the many items for wmcn uregon tax 1 noP au property owners
money goes are the boards, bureaus, departments, cS
commissions, administrations and like agencies set up for a copy and read it over very
to arrange for. control or develoD the various services, carefully several times. And
facilities and conveniences which the voters have been
led to believe are needed.
Of course, the complicated and widely ramified
business of state government does require many de
partments and agencies. There is no question about
that. Even a furniture and bedding advisory coun
cil," such as we have, may be necessary. But a little
thumbing through the Oregon Blue Book will con
vince the average taxpayer that one way to cut ad
ministrative expenses would be the elimination or
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.
please enclose six cents in stamps
as Mr. Lowry does not enjoy
any franking privilege.
ii we are stm living under a
free flag, then this bill should
never be enacted.
M. F. Allen,
- Trail Creek Rt.,
Trail, Oregon.
10 YEARS AGO
April 1. 1945
(It was Sunday)
Verl G. Walker, Walter D.
Jensen, and Oscar Minnick com
missioned as second lieutenants
in Oregon State Guard.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: This is All
Fooled Day. Oregonians have
started cussing the joke they
played on themselves at the polls
last November.
20 YEARS AGO
April 1. 1935
(It was Monday)
R. A. Work, Olea Arnspiger,
tnd Clinton Smith prepare re
port stating that the water sup
ply situation in Jackson county
should cause no alarm.
Man charged with transport
ing 12 gallons of wine in an auto
mobile is arraigned in justice
court before William R. Coleman.
SO YEARS AGO
April 1, 1925
at was Wednesday)
Eula Benson, junior mathe
matics student, and Edward C.
Kelly, first year law student,
both of Medford on honor roll
at University of Oregon.
Ernest L. Scott, formerly of
Salem, opens motorcycle and bi
cycle shop here and purchases
home on Rose ave.
She Agrees
To the Editor: I wish to agree
with Grace Pearson in her an
swer. Tnhlishd Marrh 30 in thp
Consolidation OI SOme OI OUr mUltltUamOUS depart Mail Tribune, to William Krauss
ments. we wou pu ns m
practice more, there would be a
txtotp An iUi j; .i.; j? at.. i, I lar-reacning enect on sucn
miyvxu ux muviiig m uwt uiiecuuii, ui uie things as the increasing problem
A of economy, the legislature is presently consider- of juvenile delinquency.
inp- addino- still another administrative aoencv this Following are my thoughts on
ti -e 4.1, this ever-present problem:
uxic iu wac uvci xiuui uie oirtaxe iiigiiwajf cuiiiuiiosivn father stood sadly looking
the management and maintenance of the state's parks down upon his son, lying fully
and t.n nrmiirp ndrHtinnal lnnrl fnr nark nnrnnsps. dressed across his bed. He had
Until a few weeks ago there were no indications ir
ill a i . .1 , 1 .. . I """"
mat anyone ieit tne nignway commission was not painful thoughts flashed
domff all that could be expected considennp- the across the father's mind as he
- x a I . i i
. i,j j ...,vi, -f 4.1, i.l rememoerea a small cmia oi
aiiiuuni, ui muiy it nau tu uu wiui iui cue pair. nine wnQ Qn &n occasion
prOgl'am. and especially on a Sunday
Those who have visited any of the narks which morning would say "Daddy, let's
the commission has set up and maintained have found gto,nct!ccK toceJa
, , ., , j rii i i i . r. not interested, would say I m
them uniformly good. True, it would be fine to have t0o busy, you go play," or as
more parks. They constitute a recreational asset not his son had now just said "Go
rvlir v nnnn n rncirlino i-n thajv inoimlTr hut fnv away. 1 WHIll lO S1CCU. JLJUB 10
i 'A- J'
tOUriSlS. Thp fathpr sarllv shook his
' But the decision as to number Size and location head, wiping away a tear and
nf cfafo rfivVc clirmlrl ho nvorlipaforl nnnti fVio !imnimf went to Gods house to offer up
A.i j l. a prayer: "God forgive me and
01 muiiev uie taApaveis icei uie wii aiiuiu iui suui my son who s0 sureiy is follow
purposes. . ing in the path I have made,
Speak to his heart, I pray, 'ere it
THF. nT?F.nnMTAM nno nf fho nrinninnl nrnnnripnfss be too late. Amen
.i-xi-. -T- t jfif it.- iij.. .-;j.i..- Let us not work just to give
oi tne ciiange, Drusnes oxi uie laiter cunsiuei auun, those we love the things that
however; With the Observation that "To argue OVer can so easily be taken away. But
dollars and cents, or the pros and cons of removing fmd time to strive ana pray
a function of the highway department, is to thresh
about futilely on the fringe of the real issue.
The real issue,- as we see it, is not whether we
should have more parks and a new and undoubtedly
more expensive set-up for park administration and
maintenance but whether the state of Oregon can
afford such a change at this time.
MTU . ro iow mtv 4- 10O11A vinrVi- Attr tfl AtswtYrviYr
T.- il ?2 1- .1 I &
wnetner it De our pants program or in any otner state Oakland Tribune reader.
function. E.C.F.
to give them the precious things
that cannot be taken from them,
that their lives may be full of
peace, happiness and hope and
not just empty cisterns to be fill
ed with doubts, fears and world
ly lusts.
Lillian Wallace
Box 227E Rt. 2
. Medford, Ore.
Witnesses Supported
To the Editor: Just a few lines
in regard to the people who are
against Jehovah Witnesses, and
for barring them from using any
public buildings, which is wrong.
People pay taxes and these
buildings are built by tax
money.
Jehovah Witnesses pay taxes
and their children go to public
schools.
I am between 75 and 80 years
old and have been a member of
two churches and was a teacher
for years but I gave up as our
churches are not teaching the
Bible the way they should, and 40
years ago as I got deeper in the
study of the Bible, I learned a
great many things Jehovah Wit
nesses are teaching now. No bet
ter Bible students in the world
today than Johovah Witnesses.
I am not a member of them but
some day I may join them.
If any one is a real Christian
they would not fight them. They
are sure living up to trying their
best to teach what Christ wants
all people to know and they do
not ask you or me for one cent.
They pay their own way wher
ever they go.
Christians all over fight these
people and if you or anyone
think you are a Christian you
are not, because Christians do
not fight another Christian. Just
get in and study the most won
derful book in the world.
As to the flag it is an emblem
not God, or anything that repre
sents such, and I know they re
spect it, and so do I as my peo-
pie have all died in aU these
American wars. I am 100 per
cent an American, ancestors go
back 275 years.
I have been a Bible student
since old enough to read.
Jehovah Witnesses are not a
cult bunch either. There are 250
or more churches teaching too
many things not Christlike.
hope all church people as weU
as others study the Bible ana
they all will love Jehovah Wit
nesses instead of hate.
William Ross Sharp
26 Portland ave.
Medford, Ore.
In the Day's News
Is That So?
MAN WENT FISHING
4.000 YEARS AGO
'With the angling season bear
ing down on us, can't you put us
straight on the origins of our
40 YEARS AGO
AprU 1, 1915
(It was -Thursday)
Reports from Medford weather
bureau shows seasonal deficiency
of rain at 11.51 inches.
From the Local and Personal
column: The street department
is regrading dirt streets in the
residential districts. Work is now
under way on East Ninth. The
ground is plowed and leveled a
process that kiUs the weeds.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Cepr. 1955. Editorial Research Report
1. The guaranteed annual
wage is now an issue, in auto,
coal, railroad, ' textile or steel
wage negotiations?
2. The famous Japanese cherry
trees in Washington were
planted by Lincoln, or were
there when the city was found
ed, or were a gift from Japan, or
were raised from seed by Mrs.
Coolidge.
3. The 1956 Democratic na
tional convention will be in San
Francisco, Chicago, New York,
Philadelphia or Atlantic ?-CityX
4. Less or more obscene mat
ter is now going through the
mails than usual, or about as
much as usual?
5. A conference committee on
a bill in dispute between the
Senate and the House usually
has more Senators, more Repre
sentatives, or the same number
of each?
6. More than half, about half,
or less than half of all American
men drink at least six glasses of
beer a week?
7. Harry Lillis Crosby is bet
ter known as ?
The Answers: I. Auto negotia
tions. 2. A gift from Japan. , 3.
Chicago. 4. Much more, say pos
tal officials. 5. Same number of
each. 6. Less than half. 7. Bing
Crosby.
, Of the . nation's 18 to 21 year
old youths, more than 21 per
cent attend "some college or un
iversity courses.
Frankly, J. O. B., there are
few things I would rather dis
cuss. As you perhaps know,
angling as a sport reaches into
antiquity. In fact the oldest rep
resentation of an angler with a
rod goes back almost 4,000 years
Hunting, Fishing Big Business
, When the Oregon state legislature, back in 1905,
passed the first law requiring residents of the state
to have a license to hunt game, probably few if any
of the lawmakers had any idea how greatly the work
of licensing sportsmen and the carrying on of con
trol and propagation of game and fish would expand
m the years to come.
THE first fishing licenses were issued in 1909.- As
1,
tucic was iiu game uiiiiiiiiNMUii aii uie time uie
laws were passed, both fishing and hunting permits
were handled bv individual counties of the state
which forwarded fees collected to the te treasuw
to De put m tne game protective iuno. it was not e-footrod
until 1912 that such fees were collected directly by The first mention of fishing
the state a y may' ve been
. ... , ., , , a natural fly impaled upon a
Although license sales figures are not available hook is right around the time
for those early years, it mav.be presumed that the of Christ
fot-ilo nioro nnt lavrra Tf ia o rHPnro cfn r1oir Tw0 centuries later, Aelian
V " " vv'. " V-l wrote, telling exactly how arti-
xiie game coniixiissiun s laiesi uieniuum repurt snows ficial flies, were tied by the
receipts totaling $2,552,575 from licenses for angling Macedonians who c a u g h t fish
and hunting. ' "with speckled skins not doubt
,? - , . . trout He wrote: "They fasten
While the license fees add up to an impressive red wool around the hook and
sum. the figures do not tell the whole revenue story, fix on to the wool two feathers
Fines. levied for infractions of the game laws add hich fow,.und.er a1cock'8 ?at
. - . .. o I tips, and whirh in rnlnr a lilrn
..n;....k .. u 1.1.. a i. i. ik. M 1 -
cuiismci auiy iu uie utile. Accuruiiig lu uie annual wax."
report Of the State police, Violators Were assessed a The next mention of artificial
total of $102,650.75 in fines last year alone. Of the Srbookt2myuedbater " and
2,483 arrests recorded the most, 460 to be exact, were Dame0JuiS Bemers ithp
lor minting m prombited areas, during illegal Hours, Treatyse of Fysshynge with an
Or by illegal methods. lowing this, in 1653 Izaak
OUNTING and fishing haven't become big business K SSS 3 whiles
xx in Oregon alone, however. According to the gone into some 250 editions (of
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, there were 32,654,199 ree and f
i , v v ,1 . . . .1 1 nun iui me ouuiu anniversary IS
ucvuicco ui uiic vi uuui ui we opui w ui uiic naixuxi perhaps the last).
during the last fiscal year. Although sixteen states in these early days, the rod
issued a total of 347,070 free hunting and fishing wag made of cane or on "8t
licenses enough other sportsmen paid for permits to
bring the total up to $84,975,516 for the period.
E.C.F.
By Eugene Burns
Ranger-Naturalist
elastic wood, and only about 6-8
feet long. The line was made of
the bristly hairs of animals main
ly horsehairs. Usually the braid
ed line was fastened to the top
of the rod. The hook was made
of bone, thorns, iron or bronze
The principle of the loose run
ning line was iiot evolved until
the middle of the 17th century,
Hence the playing of big fish
was a difficult matter the cus
tom being to throw the rod into
the water immediately and let
ting the big fish fight the rod
and tire out after which the ex
hausted fish was retrieved still
attached to the rod.
(Released by McClure
Newspaper Syndicate)
(Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the read who sends me the best
question on nature and wildlife
a complete 30-volume set of this
world-famous reference work in
a handsome Sealcraft binding.
Each week, new questions will
be considered. Sorry, I simply
can't answer your many friendly
letters. Please address your ques
tions to: IS THAT SO! care this
paper, Box 575, Sausalito, Calif.)
Construction Started
On Residential Unit
Construction was started this
week on a $14,000 three-unit res
idential property off East Main
st., back of the new Park bar
bershop and Rogue Camera shop
building, according to Jack
Bickler, one of the builders T.
C. Florey, the other builder, and
Bickler, are in charge of con
struction. They expect it to be
completed in about six months.
Bickler designed the building
and Bob Hinman drew the plans.
The structure will be of pu
mice blocK and will be faced
similarly to the barber shop and
camera shop building. Street ad
dress numbers which have been
assigned to the units are 52-522-
524 East Main st. Because the :
building faces onto the city park
parking lot, no drivein or garage
space is available.
By FRANK JENKINS
That city is fortunate that has
a hotel that is the center of the
life of the town, that is rooted in
the soil of the country in which
both the hotel and the city are
located, where everybody goes
for every civic purpose, that is a
showplace for the community
and for the entire area in which
the community is located.
SUCH a hotel is La Fonda, in
Sante Fe, New Mexico. It is
located at a. corner of the an
cient plaza that is overlooked by
the three and a half centuries
old Governor's Palace that was
built in, 1610. Its architecture is
the characteristic architecture of
Spanish New Mexico. Its fur
nishings are the characteristic
furnishings of that glamorous
period of the American South
west.
The pictures on its walls are
by local artists Santa Fe has a
very considerable art colony of
its own. On the walls of a cov
ered patio that is one of its main
entrances is - a map of the old
Santa Fe trail. Its kitchens pro
duce and serve the native foods
of the region. In one corner of
the lobby is a store where au
thentic handicrafts of the South
west Indian jewelry, Indian
blankets, Indian dolls, the new
casual clothes that are being pro
duced by gifted designers who
have settled in the Santa Fe
country and other native prod
ucts of the region are sold at
reasonable prices by people who
are intimately familiar with the
products and with their histori
cal background. .
LA FONDA is an authentic
and charming Sante Fe country
and its rich heritage of romance
and adventure and old world
flavor.
rriHERE is a proverb to the ef
feet that no rose is without
its thorn.
WeU, La Fonda has its thorn
The thorn is its parking lot. The
lot is located at the hotel's rear,
It is courteously staffed. Your
feelings are never ruffled. Your
wants are pleasantly taken care
of. But you never, NEVER have
the faintest idea what your bUl
at the lot is going to De.
It all depends on the number
of tunes you go in and out with
your car. The price schedule
caUs for a fairly stiff charge for
the first hour, and a smaller
charge for the hours thereafter,
Every time you go out and come
back in, a new first hour starts.
And you're apt to be coming in
and going out rather often, for
there are many fascinating
things to be seen in the country
roundabout.
It isn't that the charges are
exhorbitant. They aren't. They
average right along with the
charges at storage garages in the
average city. It's just that you
wear your fingers out counting
up on them what your parking
charge is going to be, and never
hit it on the nose.
A Nichol's Worth of...
Comment On This and That
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
United Press Featur Writer
see
liar man Nichols
gUT-
-You may say
Why not park on the street if
you're too tight to pay. the
charges in the hotel's parking
lot or too short on mathemati
cal ability to properly compute
what your biU is going to be?
THEREIN if you should ask
KlirVl a rmpctinn vnn urmilH
betray your lack of understand
ing of the backgrounds of this
oldest city in America.
When Santa Fe was founded,
in the declining years of the
16th century (some two or three
generations before the landing of
the Pilgrim Fathers at Plymouth
Rock) there were three kinds of
transport in the upper valley of
the Rio Grande.
1. By Shank's ponies.
2. By ox or mule cart.
3. By the prancing steeds of
the gay Spanish caballeros.
None of these three methods
required wide streets. So, when
the city was laid out, the streets
were made narrow if, for no
other reason, to insure that cost
of cobblestone pavements would
not be too prohibitive.
FOR the first two or three
miartpr. tf 4 Via ' fitv'm mn
than three centuries of history
the idea worked wonderfully. .
But there came then the auto
mobile, which made a mess of
things. On most of the old streets
there is barely room for two
cars to pass, with NO room for
parking. So, since no room (or
very little room) is available for
street parking and since Santa
Fe has at least as many automo
biles in proportion to its popula
tion as any other American city,
you can see what a problem
parking is.
Washington (U.R If you
a tau man in a smart
gray suit and a pearl - gray
.. homburg snif
fing through a
trash can in an
aUey ' in your
town it could
be Dr. Frank
Monaghan.
The digni
fied professor,
historian and
editor is per
haps Americas
No. 1 sworn
enemy of un-
cleanliness.
Dr. Monaghan is director of
the National Clean-Up, Paint-Up,
Fix-Up bureau. If there is one
thing he can't stand it's a house
peeling off old paint, or some
thing out back that would be
on the seamy side, like a gar
bage pail with its lid off. . .
National Clean-Up week is his
annual goal, and always comes
in the spring, but the professor
has his nose to the stone, or to
the wind, the year around.
"I run about the country
looking for filth," he said in an
interview. "If I find any, and
most pf the time I do, I try to
my. level best to see that some
thing is done about it. You can
get a lot done by screaming
'For Shame'! " and leaning on
civic pride. 'If there is no civic I
pride around, stir up some."
Townspeople Astounded
Folks to whom the graying
professor lectures often are as-1
tounded at what he knows about
their town.
"But doctor," they say,' "you
just got here."
Odds are that he didn't just
get there. Heesneaked in during
the black hours and did some
prowling around the streets, al
leys and by-ways, taking mental
notes on neglect and dreaming
up a picture" of what could be a
lovely town.
"If I don't have any luck with
the big folks," the clean - up
man said, "I work with the kids
You can get a lot of leaves raked
and trash hauled away with a
few loUypops or a dozen hot
dogs with onions and mustard.'
While teaching, he used to in
itiate his new classes with the
thought that "Education is the
best substitute for intelligence.'
Today, he likes to add, "you
can ' begin with the youngsters
and work up to the adults."
Often if he has a free action
in a new town, he will gather
the neighborhood kids around a
fire and organize what he likes
to caU "The Happy Digger-Plan
ter club."
Unfriendly Analysis
Of Yalta Papers
Available to GOPs
Washington (U.R) An analy
sis of the Yalta papers which is
"highly critical of the Roosevelt
administration was available to
day for Republicans who want
to make the World War II con
ference a campaign issue. ' ' .
The analysis was prepared by
the staff of the Senate GOP
Policy Committee headed by
Sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.)-.
But Bridges said that he and
other members of the committee
do not take responsibility for
statements made in the memor
andum. Says Disregarded Bomb
The memo said Mr. Roosevelt
"completely disregarded" at Yal
ta information that .the atomic
bomb would be ready by the
summer of 1945 and made what
it termed unnecessary conces
sions to get Russia into the war
against Japan.
The memo also said it is "non
sense" to "assert, as New Deal
apologists do,", that Alger Hiss
was "only a note-taker and had
no important role at Yalta." Hiss
was an advisor to the U.S. dele
gation at Yalta and later was
convicted of perjury for lying
about his aUeged Communist
connections. -,
"Before going to Yalta he had
been given aU the top secret
papers of what the United States
intended to do," the report said.
Former President Harry S.
Truman was accused of "cover
ing up" the Yalta papers during
his regime, despite efforts by
Congress .to obtain the full
account. . j
"It sometimes keeps the kids
so busy cleaning up tin cans
and shooing away the Japanese
beetles that they don't have time
to get ornery." he said.
Take Philadelphia for ex
ample, he said.
"We put on a two year cam
paign in Philadelphia and it
worked wonders. A little psy
chology here, and some plain
talk there. We got the kids in
terested in planting flower gar
dens and painting fences like
Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer.
We offered prizes for the
nicest gardens and the cleanest
alleys. Last year thrre wasn't a
1 m I.l' . A .
single case oi vandalism in xne,
169 public schools in Philadel
phia. The townspeople, of course,
got behind the cleanup business
too. Other towns are thinkine
of organizing their young for
similar projects.
"For encouragement, you can
do a lot of handing out clean-up,
paint-up buttons to members of
the Happy Digger-Planter clubi"
he said.
-Adrienne'sn
Taffa-Flair
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Lone Mississippi Red Dies
'Of Natural Causes' i
Washington (U.R) The
Communist party has died "of
natural causes" in Mississippi.
Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. CD
Mass.), after studying a 6tate-by-state
breakdown of 1951
Communist : Party membership
on exhibit before the House
Rules Committee Thursday ask
ed Rep. William M. Dolmer CD-
Miss): "What did you ever do
about that one Communist down
there in Mississippi?"
"Oh, she died," Dolmer said.
". . . Of natural causes. I nad
better say, or someone will ac
cuse -us of a lynching."
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