L
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
Ml
wltftTRIBUl(I
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
April 11. 1S45
(It was Wednesday)
Mrs. W. C. Rookard, program
chairman for Medford Garden
club, announces plans for ob
servance of Arbor day on April
22.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Due to the
usual unusual April weather,
the pear crop and outdoor girls
getting poison oak are 10 days
behind.
20 YEARS AGO
April 11, 1935
(It was Thursday)
Ed M. White, Medford, named
to national committee on real
estate taxation.
A. H. Banwell, manager of the
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce, outlines county's
five-year plan of development in
speech before Medford Lions
club.
30 YEARS AGO
April 11, 1925
(It was Saturday)
Medford Lions club will be
presented a charter May 9,
Frank Neer, district governor
for Oregon, has announced.
J. A. Churchill, state superin
tendent of schools about 12
years, elected president of the
state normal school to be rees
tablished at Ashland.
40 YEARS AGO
April 11, 1915
(It was Sunday)
The Ashland Business Men's
association was organized last
Friday evening with over 40
members.
From the Local and Personal
column: Edison Marshall of this
city has been chosen as the offi
cial playwright of the sophomore
class of the University of Ore
gon. Last year Marshall was the
official poet of the freshman
class.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Cepr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Secretary of State Dulles
says the threat of war today is
greater from Russia or China, or
equally from each?
2. Many auto insurance com
panies give lower rates to the
youngsters who've passed a high
school driver course than to
those who haven't; right or
wrong?
3. Average retail prices over
the U.S. in the last three months
dropped or rose considerably, or
stayed about the same?
4. In the absence of a new
farm law this year, farm price
supports next year go automati
cally to 75, 75-90, 82Vi-90, or 90
percent or parity?
5 The Negev is an area be
tween Israel and Egypt, Israel
and Jordan, or Egypt and Jor
dan? 6. Chances of a hole in one on
a short hole for an expert golfer
are computed to be about one in
85, 850, 8,500 or 85,000?
7. Penguins do or don't fly?
11:3 Answers: 1. From China.
T. Zlrht. 3. Stayed about the
: r. 4. To 75-20 per cent. 5. All
i'.rz. 6. About one in 8.500. 7.
r-i't.
tolsl payroll of hospitals
U mounted to $2,987,
'Jj for their 1,168,564
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Income . Tax Plan
State Rep. Al Littrell has sent us an interesting
breakdown of how the proposed new income tax law
would affect taxpayers of
The bill, key to the tax program passed recently
by the House and now being studied by the Senate's
tax committee, is meeting opposition in the upper
body because many Senators feel it would not raise
enough money to meet the state's prospective deficit.
IN the first place, the whole proposed tax program
is predicated on a number of assumptions : that the
budget can be cut so much, that revenues will attain
such-and-such a level, and
One of these assumptions is that a cigarette tax,
part of the tax "package," will not be referred to a
vote of the people as it has
m the past. It is also assumed that the income tax
hike itself will not be referred a somewhat shaky
assumption at best.
MOW, to. the income tax
raise an estimated $10,400,000 more per year
than is raised by the present income tax. It would
lower personal exemptions and dependency credits
from $600 to $500. It would change the tax rates to
a minimum of 2 per cent on the first $500 earned and
up to 9 per cent on all income over $10,000 annually.
A table prepared by the research section of the
state tax commission applies these changes to various
income levels for a hypothetical individual who files
a joint return and has one
There is no state or federal income tax for this
individual up to the $2,000
At the $3,000 level, however, he now pays about
$177 in federal tax and $14 in state tax, a total of
some $192. Under the new
less federal income tax, $7
a net increase of $5, or 2.7
tax w'ould amount to 45.1
At the $5,000 income level, the total tax is now
$585. The new proposal would boost the total to $607',
a net increase of $22, and
per cent overall (or a hike
cent).
At the $10,000 level, present total tax is $1,673.
The new tax would lift this total (including state and
federal) to $1,726, a decrease of $15 in federal tax,
an increase of $67 in" state tax, for a net increase of
$52. The percentage increase is 30.8 per cent for state
tax, and an over-all increase of 3.1 per cent.
OING on up, to the $100,000 level, the net increase
amounts to $119, a 12.2 per cent change in the
state tax, but only a .2 per cent change in the overall
total, making it $52,716 instead of $52,597 as at
present. . . .
This proposal squeaked through the House with
a margin of only one vote. The balloting was 31 for,
27 against, but the measure needed the 31 pro votes
to give it a constitutional majority rof the 60 house
votes. E.A.
What Alternative?
Whether we like it or don't, the legislature is
heading for some sort of plan such as outlined above.
It is full of loopholes and weak spots, but the legisla
ture has not yet shown any disposition to formulate
a sounder program.
It is generally admitted (as Sen. Lee Ohmart
pointed out during a recent talk in Medford) that it is
a "stop-gap" program one to keep the state theoret
ically solvent, without regard to a basically sound
program, until it is possible to revamp the system with
some hope of getting a plan approved by the voters.
A BOUT the only alternative which has been put
"forward so far is a sales tax, in one form or anoth
er. But it appears evident that this legislature is not
disposed to pass one, for a variety of reasons. (One
legislator writes, "Although I am not in favor of this
(the income tax) program, as I prefer a sales tax, un
der tlie circumstances it looks like the best we are
going to be able to do.")
Many -legislators are pleased that two sales tax
bills are being studied by legislative committees, even
if there is no chance of getting them approved. This
seemingly odd attitude is caused by the fact that they
want to see a "good" sales tax plan drawn up, studied
and ready, in case a group of voters takes it upon
itself to initiate a sales tax proposal.
a
MANY OF them believe that sales tax proposals in
1V1 the past have been defeated by the voters be
cause they have lacked some of the equalizing fea
tures that make them popular (or at least accepted)
forms of taxation in the 30-odd other states where
they are in use.
They believe that a sales tax which exempts food,
medicines, drugs and certain other necessities (in
cluding lodging and rent), would receive enthusias
tic support from the voters, including labor and f arm
groups which have in the past led in the fight to de
feat sales taxes.
IN ANY event, the problem is far from solved.
1 On Feb. 28, in this space, we said :
There is, a lack of direction and unity in the present
legislature. There is tension and apprehension, for no mat
ter what solution they come up with to solve the problem
of taxes and finances, their decisions are subject to reversal
by the voters. Their labors may go for nothing, and the
state may suffer seriously as a result. We would not be too
surprised to see a special election or a special session, or
both, within the year, unless the legislators come up with
something now unforeseen, v.
Nothing has happened in the past six weeks to
cause us to change that estimate. E.A.
Monday, April 11. 1955
Oregon.
so on.
been on several occasions
proposal itself. It would
dependent.
- per - year income level.
proposal he would pay $1
more state income tax, for
per cent. (Increase m state
per cent.)
a percentage gam of 3.5
in state tax of 47.5 per
Matter of Fact
SOME UGLY ALGEBRA
Saigon, Indo-China The real
key to the situation in this un
happy country is a
political
equation that a
sixth grader
could solve.
On one side
of this equa
tion are three
relativ ely
knowable fac
tors: the condi
dition of the
Vietnamese na
tional army,
and the condi-
Joseph Also
tion of Viet
Minh power in the North. On
the other side is the eternal un
known, the future.
Work out the three knowable
factors. Unless all the experts
are wrong about these factors,
the result equals eventual Viet
Minh victory here in Southern
Indochina, which in turn will
equal a general catastrophe in
Southern Asia.
The trouble in the countryside
is simple. President Ngo Dinh
Diem is a notably bad adminis
trator. He has also been continu
ously and perhaps inescapably
preoccupied with the struggle
for personal power in Saigon.
Thus he has left an almost com
plete administrative vacuum in
the provinces.
The ruthless and well organ
ized Communist apparatus has
been quick to send its cadres into
this vacuum. In the region of the
great rubber estate over towards
the Cambodian border, for in
stance, military measures pre
vented Viet Minh infiltration un
til Geneva ended the fighting.
But now the Viet Minh cadres
have poured in and taken over
the villages.
Again, the important province
of Nha Trang has always been
predominantly Nationalist rath
er than Communist. But in re
cent months great numbers of
Viet Minh cadres one unhappy
local official guesses as many as
2,000 have quietly moved into
Nha Trang from the neighboring
Communist stronghold of Quong
Hay. And now Nha Trang is be
ing taken over too.
In the feudal domains of the
military regilious sects, to be
sure, infiltrating Viet Minh ca
dres still get short shrift. But
when the heat is really on, the
sect leaders who are now fight
ing President Diem, will surely
tend to make the same personal
deals with the Viet Minh that
the comparable Chinese war
lords made with the Chinese
Communists.
IN THE much larger area of
Southern Indochina not under
sect control, meanwhile, between
60 and 70 per cent of the villages
are already subject to strong
Viet Minh influence, according
to estimates from American offi
cial sources. French estimates,
based on more detailed knowl
edge, give the Viet Minh proba
ble control of a fantastic 70 to 90
per cent of the villages.
. Today, to be sure, the simple
people of Viet Nam are desper
ately war weary. If a strong gov
ernment could be created m Sai
gon by some unforeseen miracle
war weariness would help to
take the villages away from the
Viet Minh. But unles all signs
deceived, Ho Chi Minh will
shortly be able to raise the Indo-
chinese countryside against the
Saigon government by the sim
ple act of sending his secret
couriers across the 17th parallel.
In other words, Ho Chi Minh
will be able to recreate in the
South the same conditions that
defeated the strong French army
in Tonkin. In that nightmare
war, the French forces held only
the towns and strong points and
even used the roads at their
peril. And because most of the
French forces were always tied
down guarding their own rear
against a hostile countryside,
there were never enough French
troops left over to confront the
main body of Viet Minh regu
lars.
Such is the first factor of our
equation which in turn confers
a rather lurid importance on the
second factor, the "Vietnamese
national army. This army is now
disorganized, demoralized and
suffering a hemorrhage of de
sertions.
Retraining and reorganization
have just been started by Lt.
Gen. John W. O'Daniel's Franco-
American 'Trim" group. But of
the six planned Vietnamese divi
sions, only three will have re
ceived serious retraining by next
year. The other three will mere
ly get 10 days apiece of "indoc
trination." And three fair and
three dubious divisions are no
force to carry the burden the
French carried in the Tonkin
Delta.
Finally, the equation's third
factor, the power of the Viet
Minh in the North, has been
growing steadily. As predicted
earlier by this reporter, the in
telligence experts have had to
raise their forecasts, giving Gen.
Vo Nguyen Giap a fuU 20 divi
sions by the spring of 1956.
-
HOW then does this equation
workout. Obviously the
first part of the answer is that
the Viet Minh would prefer to
take Southern Indochina by
peaceful means either at the
Geneva-required' election or the
formation of a "Government of
National Union" in Saigon.
But if they cannot take thei
South peacefully, yet have con
By Joseph Alsep
trol of the Southern countryside,
then the Viet Minh will surely
order the guerrillas into action.
They will filter a few guerrilla
disguised small units of regulars
into the South,- both to intimi
date any hesitant villages and
to lead the guerrilla effort. And
they will hold the balance of
their regulars, say seven divi
sions, in reserve to discourage
French or American interven
tion. In these circumstances, inter
vention with large ground forces
will be remarkably unattractive.
In these circumstances, interven
tion with the air-sea mobile
striking force Secretary Dulles
is always talking about, wiU be
about as useful as taking a blud
geon to a swarm of wasps. But
iii these circumstances, if there
is no effective intervention to
save Southern Indochina, the
Vietnamese national army .will
not be able to hold out for more
than three months.
This estimate of the Vietnam
ese army's future capability
against the kind of insidious
Viet Minh attack that is now
generally foreseen, has been of
ficially forwarded to Washing
ton and Paris by the responsible
American and French officers.
It is probably an optimistic esti
mate. At any rate, it is the final
answer of this Indochinese equa
tion, which can make a mockery
of Geneva, turn the Manila pact
into a bitterly bad joke, and seal
the fate of all South Asia.
Copyright, 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
The rich, fat, productive, prac
tical food basket that is the Im
perial valley and its exotic and
glamorous neighbor, the Coa
chella valley, provide an in
teresting climax for a period of
wandering in the higher deserts
of the Southwest.
In this particular spring, it
provides some interesting and
pleasant climatic contrasts. It
was a nippy ten above in Reno.
It was a crisp 15 above in Sante
Fe. It was invigoratingly cool
in Albuquerque. It SNOWED in
El Paso a measurable inch of
the Stuff. Tucson was warm, but
not too warm.
In the Imperial and Coachella
valleys, where the mercury
climbs to 120 in the summer (in
the shade, that is) is it H-O-T!
One pants and sweats. The men
wander around in sleeveless
shirts and walking shorts. Men
and women alike have a rich
mahogany tan.
Down here, the sun really
gets results.
THESE valleys have an interst
ing geological history. They
were once an arm of the sea.
All around, one sees the marks
of the old shoreline on the hills.
Into this ancient bay flowed
two rivers, the Colorado and the
Gila. Their waters were heavy
with silt carried down from the
mountains. After the manner of
the Nile and the Mississippi and
other great rivers in various
parts of the world, they built
deltas at their mouths.
As the millienniums passed,
these deltas dammed off the bay,
leaving a landlocked body of
ocean water. In time, their water
evaporated, leaving great salt
beds. The level of these. salt beds
was far below che level of the
sea.
AS the waters of the rivers
slowprl iinon reachine the
level coastal plain, they dropped
their silt, thus BUILDING UP
the river, bed above the level of
the surrounding plain. Then, in
time, periods of flood would
come and the rivers, notably the
Colorado, would BREAK
THROUGH their silty banks and
again flood the inland sea.
No one knows how often this
may have happened over the
eons of time during which the
mountains were being eroded
away, but at least it happened
again during a flood period in
1905. The restless Colorado
broke through its banks and
poured its full flow into the
depressed basin that once was
an arm of the ocean. After two
years of struggle, the break was
finally repaired, but in the mean
time the Salton sea was formed.
The Salton sea is now 35 miles
long, ten to 16 miles wide and
has a maximum depth of 70 feet.
The surface of its water is 241
feet below the level of the sea
and its salt content is about the
same as the ocean.
THE waters of the Colorado
have Vipen harnessed and
snread over the fertile areas that
lie above the level of the ancient
salt beds. The soil is rich. The
sun is hot. There is no biting cold
to inhibit growth. Tnere is no
WINTER season. The summer is
merely hotter than the winter.
Water for irrigation is presently
abundant.
With rich soil, hot sunshine
and abundant water, production
is huge and dependable, in tne
Imperial valley, production
takes the form of grain and hay
and vegetables and sugar beets
and such. The Imperial valley
produces the staples of life.
THE smaller Coachella valley
leans toward the more exotic
side. One of its standbys is the
date. In ancient Arabia, the date
Is That So?
By Eugene Bums
Ranger-Naturalist
Did you know that . . . The
greatest river in the world is the
Gulf Stream which flows in the
Atlantic Ocean. Between Cuba
and the Florida Keys its flows
three and a half knots, about as
fast as you can walk and faster
than you can row a good boat.
That means 100 billion tons of
salt water are carried cast the
Florida Keys every hour, on the
hour, discharge equalling about
1,000 Mississippi rivers. This
great warm river softens the cli
mate of Britain and Scandin
avia. The remora. or shark sucker.
is a hitch-hiking moocher. Its
dorsal fin has been modified into
a complicated sucker on top of
its head. With this, it attaches
itself to a large passing shark
or any otner large passing fish
or turtle to get a free ride in
the hope of sharine the mpal
at the end of the journey.
The "nowhere" point of earth
where zero latitude crosses
zero longitude occurs in the
Gulf of Guinea, off the Western
Coast of Africa. This means, fur
ther, that this "no-latitude," "no
longitude" point has "no-altitude"
either. The nearest town
to "nowhere" is Accra, capital
of the British Gold Coast col
ony. The expression "straight from
the horse's mouth" comes from
paying no attention to what a
prejudiced owner may say about
his horse's age but examining
the teeth for oneself the only
way to tell a horse's age quite
accurately. In short, getting the
true information "straight from
the horses's mouth."
The common toad sheds its
outer skin several times a year.
And swallows it.
The weight of our earth is in
creased about 100,000 tons each
year as a result of falling met
eoric material from the sky,
mostly dust and a few meteor
ites. The combined weight of the
average bee colony, numbering
around 50,000 workers, one
queen and several hundred
drones, is about ten pounds.
(Released by McClure
Newspaper Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Enrvrln-
pedia Americana, . my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader, who sends me the
best question on nature and wild
life a comDlete 30-vnlume spt nf
this world-famous reference
vas a staple food. The Arab
warriors had no huge and un
gainly supply trains to hamper
the speed of their movements.
Each warrior simply tied a bag
of dried dates behind his saddle,
and that was that. Given a little
water for themselves and their
horses, they were equipped for a
campaign of any length. Their
logical problems were nil. The
date was a COMPLETE food.
It's different now. The date is
a fabulous luxury. It is said by
Coachella valleys growers that
it costs more to produce one date
than to produce one piece of the
most expensive candy.
That puts them right in the
running in these modern days
when the more expensive any
thing is THE MORE DESIR
ABLE IT IS.
THE same goes for Palm
Springs, at the upper end of
the Coachella valley. Like dates,
it's all right. But one of Palm
Spring's chief attractions is
that it's expensive. Everybody
loves to say he has been there.
Frank Perl
CONVENIENT PAYMENTS
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Soviet Russia Starts
Reshuffling Policy
On Foreign
Bv CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
Soviet Russia has started auite
an extensive foreign policy re
shuffle because of the prospec
tive rearming
of W e s t er n
Germany.
It has given
its long threat
ened formal
notice that it
intends to an
nul its mutual
aid pacts with
Great Britain
and France.
At the same
Charles Mccann , time it has ex
pressed the hope in notes to the
united btates, Britain and
France that a treaty to restore
Austria's sovereignty can be con
cluded soon. -
Before long, the Kremlin is
expected to summon delegates
of its Iron Curtain satellite cov-
ernments to Moscow to organize
a combined military command.
i ne notmcation to Britain and
France that the mutual aid
treaties are to be annulled has
caused no excitement.
No Meaning To Treaty
Not only was the annulment
threat made months ago but the
treaties themselves had lone
ceased to mean anvthinz. Th
Kremlin's action is nothins?
more than an empty gesture.
J. he formation of a combined
Iron Curtain military command
will be m the empty gesture
class, also.
The armed forces of the satel
lite countries of Communist east
ern Europe are under the con
trol of the Kremlin now and
they will continue to be.
. From Russia's viewpoint the
trouble is that in the event of a
war not one' of the satellite
armies could be trusted to fight
the allies. They might well end
up marching eastward instead of
westward.
Whether the Kremlin's Aus
trian Treaty action is an empty
gesture should become apparent
soon.
By invitation, Austrian Chan
cellor Julius Raab was to start
talks with Soviet Foreign Minis
ter V. M. Molotov today in Mos
cow.
Warning of Caution
Raab has said that he will
intake no binding commitments
in Moscow but will try to find
out Molotov's price for a treaty.
To make sure that Raab is not
coerced into any "deal," the
United States, Britain and
France have made a loint decla
ration cautioning both- Russia
and Austria against trying to
make any one sided agreements,
The big question is still
whether Russia is willing to null
its occupation troops out of Aus
tria. The probability is that it
will not, and thus that there will
be no treaty at this time.
If Soviet Foreign Minister
Molotov had a sense of humor
he undoubtedly would smile
when he thought of denouncing
the treaties with Britain and
work in a handsome Sealcraft
binding. Each week, new ques
tions will be considered. Sorry,
I simply can't answer your many
friendly letters. . Please address
your questions to: IS THAT SO!
Care of Medford Mail Tribune,
Box 575, Sausaiito, Calif.
SOC WOMEN ELECT
Ashland Beth Eskew, junior
in elementary education at
Southern Oregon college, has
been elected president of the As
sociated Women Students for the
coming school year. Elected vice
president was Patty Brooks, Lin
coln Beach; treasurer, Arlene
Lestico, Eugene; and secretary,
Virginia Ferguson, Ashland. Miss
Eskew, 21, is a graduate of Gold
Hill high school. She is presently
treasurer of the student body and
a member of Sigma Epsilon Pi,
women's honorary society.
Since 1908
PERL
Mortuary
o
Phone 2-6675
L
Affairs
France. These treaties bind the
signatories to aid each other in
event of war with Germany, and
to enter no hostile alliances
against each other.
The treaties have been out
dated by events; and anyway the
western allies have known for
nearly 10 years that no treaty
with .Russia is worth the paper
on which it is written.
Labor Council Tells
Meal Inspection
Proposal Support
The Medford Central Labor
council, at a meeting last week,
decided to writs the ways and
means committee of the Ore
gon legislature in support of
House Bill 99, the proposed meat
inspection law.
The council earlier had gone
on record supporting the meas
ure, and had written State Sen.
Philip Lowry and Reps. E. H.
Mann and E. A. Littrell, stating x
the councils view Replies have
been received giving assurances
of support.
Supports Disaster Car Plan
The council also voted to go
on record as giving support to
the plan of the International As
sociation of Fire Fighters to ob
tain and equip a disaster car for
use in this area. The council said
"this is indeed a very worth
while undertaking, and is
worthy of the support of ail or
ganized labor.
The firefighters local, No. 824,
is seeking to raise $20,000
through donations to purchase a
bus and convert it into a disaster
car, which would be manned by
members of the local whenever
needed.
The council reported that
plans are being made to have
guest speakers at council meet
ings from time time. Their visits
will be publicized, the council
said.
Russians May Speak
On 'Voice' Program
Washington (U.R) The U. S.
Information Agency will invite
11 Russian student editors to
broadcast to their homeland dur
ing their forthcoming visit to the
United States.
USIA Director Theodore R.
Sreibert said he planned, to in
vite them to speak over the Voice
of America "so that they can
broadcast back to Russia and tell
about their experiences here, and
show that we have no Iron Cur
tain ourselves and they are per
fectly free to speak to the world,
whatever they wish to say."
Streibert made the statement
yesterday on a television pro
gram. He referred to the 11
Soviet student editors who ar
rive in New York April 19. The
Russians plan a tour of at least
eight American college cam
puses. We Are 65
Geo. N. Taylor
Sixty-five per cent of us here
in the U.S.A. are said to be
church members. Many of us be
lieve that our
own good
works will
carry us
s 1 1 a i g ht to
glory. Our
own human
goodness is to
carry us up to
heaven. But
the Bible says
that our own
good works do
not save us.
Somewhere Geo. N. Taylor
we sinned and the wages of sin
is death eternal separation
from God. This is "The Second
Death" Revelation 20:13-15.
All our good works will not blot
out one sin. Only Christ's blood
cleanses from sin I John 1:7.
Our part is to receive Jesus
Christ into our heart as our own
Lord and Saviour. At that, God
writes eternal life on our page.
Good works? Being saved let
Jesus Christ work them out thru
you. And by Bible and prayer,
let us grow up.
This message sponsored by an
Oregon dairyman and family.
Adv. . -, ', ;
TRIBUNE
IMAM1??
FOR RESULTS
Phono
2-61 41
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