FOOT MEDfORD (OREGON)
MedfordUHTribune
Xverybody in Southern Orcfoa
Read The Mail Trtbunt"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
17-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-A141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
E C FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
-RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered aa second clasa matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
Marcn j. io
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"ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
iO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
May 25. 1945
(It was Friday)
New record set for this time
of year when 1.21 inches of rain
falls in Rogue valley.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Last week
was one of the most historic of
all time, and the wettest for two
years around here.
20 YEARS AGO
May 25. 1935
(It was Saturday)
Plans made for air show at
Medford airport celebrating Me
morial Day.
Medford voters approve re
funding $250,000 in outstanding
Improvement bonds at low inter
est rate, and continue city's 15
per cent contribution for SERA
relief work in light vote.
30 YEARS AGO
May 25, 1925
(It was Monday)
Medford ordinance requiring
payment of license fees and fil
ing of bond by solicitors taking
orders for "future delivery of
goods for which payment is col
lected in advance declared in
valid by United States supreme
court
Bids for new J. H. McGee
women's dry goods store in Ash
land in hands of contractors.
40 YEARS AGO
May 25. 1915
(It was Tuesday)
Highway over Siskiyou to be
open within a week if good
weather prevails.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The city council of Ashland
has appropriated $200 to reim
burse auto owners who take tour
ists on sightseeing trips. Under
the system car owners will re
ceive cash for the oil and gaso
line used in boosting.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Gat 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Report
1. Americans spend more
money every year on radio and
TV, photography, newspapers or
movie- going?
2. The famous Cathedral of
St. Mark is in Rome, London,
Venice, Montreal, Florence, Mos
cow or Vienna?
3. A little more than one, two,
three, four or five per cent of
all children between 7 and 17
get into juvenile court every
year?
4. There are or aren't mem
bers of Congress who are mem
bers of the Mormon church?
5. Most Chinese are Buddhists;
right or wrong?
6. The average car bought at
a little over $2000 and' driven
10.000 miles a year costs about
$650, $760, $850, $950 or $1050
a year to operate?
7. Queen Elizabeth will vote
in the new British elections, is
barred by law from voting, or
is deterred by tradition?
The answers: 1. Photography.
2. Venice. 3. A little more than
one per cent. 4. Are. 5. Wrong
(many but not most). 6. About
$950. including depreciation, in
surance, etc. 7. Deterred by
tradition.
Springfield, 111. (U.PJ A man
wrote to Gov. William G. Strat
ton to say he will return the
wheelbarrow he stole from the
state fair in 1950. The letter was
not signed.
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Polio Snafu
Infantile paralysis will not be licked this year.
And it's a crying shame, for it probably could
have been. Through a series of blunders, some of them
still unknown, the entire vaccination program has
been so confused and beclouded that it's difficult to
know just what is what.
TOR this reason it is easy to understand the action
of those Jackson county parents who have decided
to wait before permitting their youngsters to undergo
vaccination with the Salk anti-polic shots.
It has been pointed out that the vaccine being
used in Oregon is from a drug firm whose vaccine
has not been connected with a single case of polio
throughout the entire nation. It has been checked
and found to meet the highest standards. It would
not have been approved for use by the state board of
health, the state medical society, and the local health
office, if there were any thought that it could be
dangerous.
DECAUSE of this we feel that those parents who
have elected to permit their children to receive
the vaccine have nothing to fear, and probably have
taken a step which may well save the youngsters in
volved from the ravages of the crippling disease.
Yet a word of warning might be appropriate,
for, as the county health officer has pointed out,
Jackson county is statistically "overdue" for its first
cases of polio. Last year at this time there had been
several.
And it is possible that some child who has had
the vaccine will be stricken by the disease. If it does
happen, it should not be construed to mean that the
vaccine was responsible.
"THE discovery of the vaccine is a great step for-
ward in the progress of medicine. It will be
further refined and improved and tested, and in the
course of a few years will come to be one of the
standard protectors of health which we have come o
take so much for granted like the immunization
against smallpox, whooping cough' and typhoid.
In the meantime it is tragic that such a monu
mental snafu has arisen over the testing, retesting,
withdrawal and distribution involving the vaccine
program in its various phases. E.A.
That Time of Year
Comes now that time of year that works a great
change in the way of life of two groups of people
school age youngsters, and their monthers.
For the kids it's wonderful. Three months of
freedom !
For the mothers, it's something else again.
PJURING tiie orderly months when school is m prog
ress, there are at least five days ar week when the
problem is confined to getting the young things out
of bed, dressed, washed, fed and away in time for the
starting bell, and in the late afternoon of keeping
tabs as to their location, and getting 'em in for supper.
Now, however, with
youngsters will be around
and imaginative souls, perhaps, it will pose no prob
lem. But we have a hunch that hundreds of mothers
right now are inwardly and secretly half dreading
the day.
IT is for their benefit that we present a partial list
of activities which can keep the youngsters occu
pied while mother is,- at least, getting her housework
out of the way.
For grades 4 through 12 there will be an arts
and crafts workshop at the junior high school for a
month starting June 13.
For boys aged 8 and older, a baseball school will
be under way June 20 to August 4, and for Peewees,
cubs and intermediate players there will be the South
ern Oregon Junior baseball league.
Summer band and orchestra will be available for
varying periods for those in grades 4 through 12.
Summer tennis is available for junior and senior
high school students.
All these are under the sponsorship of the Med
ford public schools.
THE city swimming pool at Hawthorne park is tenta-
tively scheduled to open June 4, and remain open
through the summer from 1 to 9 p.m., and for smaller
children there is a playground program planned at
the park from noon to 8 p.m.
In addition to these activities, there are those of
the Boy and Girl Scouts and of the Medford YMCA.
And a return to the art of reading, which is per
haps too much neglected these days, would open up
great fields of adventure to youngsters of all ages.
The library is equipped to fill this need.
THIS is a rich and varied program, one which has
been built up gradually over the years in response
to demands by youngsters and their parents for con
structive things to do during the dog days of sum
mer. We might also suggest an occasional picnic or
camping trip into the unequalled beauty of the for
ests of southern Oregon, a visit to Crater Lake or
the Oregon Caves, or one of the other beauty spots
which bring tourists to our state from far distances.
But it's a cinch that no matter how many of these
opportunities there are, there will always be days
when mother will think f orward wistfully, to the be
ginning of school in September. E.A. -
Wednesday. May 25, 1955
schools getting out, the
all day. For some stout
f
iraiian roimcai
Leaders Must Decide
On Future
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
Italy is likely to be in the
headlines frequently during the
next few weeks.
Its political
leaders have
got to decide
whether to con
tinue their loy
al cooperation
with the West
ern Allies or to
swing toward
"co- existence"
with the Com
munists.
There is very
Charles McCann little reason to
doubt that the decision wiU be
to work with the Allies.
In fact, it is likely- that the
United States occupation troops
now in Austria, numbering
about 10,000, may be transfer
red to Northern Italy.
But there are some complica
tions to be ironed out.
Giovanni Groncm, the new
Italian president, would like to
see Italy pursue a policy of "-dis-tensione"
easing of tension.
That, to Gronchi, means a pol
icy of coexistence ith the Com
munists. He favors including the
left wing Socialists in the gov
ernment coalition. The leftist
Socialists are fellow travelers
with the Communists.
Mario Scelba, the pro-American,
bitterly anti-Communist
premier, is under heavy attack
by enemies of his own Christian
Democratic party. These enemies
include Gronchi.
A threat of a no-confidence
vote hangs over Scelba. Some
experts believe he may fall after
the Sicilian elections on June 5,
if not before.
The United States government
has been worried over the Italr
ian situation for some time. It's
anxiety increased after Gronchi's
election as president April 29.
It was even reported that Am
erican aid to Italy might be cut
off.
. Instead, the United States took
another tack.
Scelba and Clare Booth Luce,
President Eisenhower's beauti
ful, brilliant ambassador, sign
ed an agreement Monday by
which Italy is to get a long-term
loan of $50,000,000. The loan
will be used largely to aid
Southern Italy, whose poverty
makes it a breeding ground for
Communism.
Russia stepped into the situa
tion yesterday. Pravda, the news
paper organ of the Russian Com
munist party, said that Italian-
Soviet relations had long been
unsatisfactory.
If American troops now in
Austria are sent to Italy, Pravda
said, "This will further increase
the danger of Italy's involve
ment in military adventures the
Tito Grateful
For Remembrance
Belgrade, Yugoslavia (U.R)
President Tito thanked Russia
for wishing him a happy 63rd
birthday today on the eve of an
historic mission from Moscow
to forgive him for his seven
years' defiance of the Kremlin.
"I most sincerely thank you
for your congratulations on the
occasion of my birthday," Tito
said in a cable to Marshal Kli
ment Voroshilov, president 6f
the Presidium of the Soviet
Union's Supreme Soviet.
Tito celebrated his birthday
on the eve of the visit by a top
level Soviet delegation that will
translate into reality the Yugo
slav President's prediction when
the Cominform ousted him in
1948.
"One day they will come back
to us and admit they were
wrong," Tito said then.
Tjjje Soviets headed by Com
munist party boss Nikita Khru
shchev and Premier Nikolai Bul
ganin arrived to woo Tito's
friendship and end the long eco
nomic blockade by the East Eu
ropean bloc.
Morse, Neuberger
Present Celilo Bill
Washington (U.R) A $210,000
fund would be authorized to ac
quire a new village site for the
Celilo Indian tribe in Oregon
under legislation introduced by
Oregon Senators.
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) ex
plained the present village site
will be inundated by the reser
voir of The Dalles dam now un
der construction. Some of the
tribe will have to be moved this
year and the entire village by
the summer of next year, he
said.
Morse said the Indians are
"without funds to reestablish
themselves .They need the na
tion's help and they need it
promptly."
The bill, sponsored also by
Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D
Ore.), would .authorize a $210,
000 transfer of funds from the
Army engineers, who are build
ing the dam, to the interior de
partment. Morse said the sum
"appears sufficient to meet all
expenses of the relocation."
' I
of Nation
consequences of which would be
serious for her."
Scelba dismissed this as of
fensive propaganda.
Ambassador Luce leaves for
the United States Friday to re
port to President Eisenhower
and Secretary of State John Fos
ter Dulles on what may soon be
come an Italian crisis.
If the situation gets hot, she
will be ready to fly back to
Rome on short notice.
!n the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Here's a curious fact:
If, in any town, you'll take the
trouble to check up on the water
users (counting household me
ters, for example) and will then
ascertain the circulation of the
newspaper in the same area,
you'll find that the two figures
will be about equal.
That is to say, the newspaper
is almost as indispensable in the
modern world as water.
VlfELL, a newspaper can be put
" to almost as many uses as
water.
You can line shelves with it.
And drawers. You can use it in
place of excelsior to pack gifts
in a box. And to clean paint
brushes on. And to wipe up
messes with. If you want to clean
the ashes out of the fireplace,
you'll find no more satisfactory
method than to pile them onto a
newspaper (after all the fire is
out oi them, of course), fold the
edges over neatly and take the
bundle out and dump it in the
garbage can.
You can wrap things up in
newspapers to keep the moths
out. If you're a duck hunter, you
can line your shooting coat with
them to keep the cold winds out.
In a pinch, bunched-up newspa
pers make pretty fair goose de
coys. THE LIST of the newspaper's
uses is almost endless.
Heck! You can even READ it,
if you get tired of listening to the
radio. When you're in a bad
mood, you can call up the editor
on the phone and tell him off in
no uncertain terms. It will relax
you no end, and it will do the
editor no harm.
It's far better than going out
on the back porch and kicking
the cat. The cat doesn't deserve
the abuse, and the editor prob
ably does. Besides, it will keep
him from getting cocky and try
ing to run down the town.
rpHE BEND BULLETIN recent
ly told of an interesting use
for newspapers that was common
in an earlier day. It says:
"Nearly half a century ago,
homesteaders making the futile
attempt to recaim Central Ore
gon's high desert used papers of
the day profusely in insulating
their cabins. Layers of them
were used between boards to
provide some protection against
the cold. Others were pasted on
the walls, more for insulation
than for decoration.
"When those old desert cabins
were being torn down the papers
not only dated their construction
but provided interesting infor
mation about state, national and
world conditions of the day.
"Those cabin builders of near
ly five decades ago were actually
recording the history of their
own times when they papered
the walls of their isolated
homes."
THAT brings up an interesting
personal recollection.
A decade and a half "ago, or
such a matter, Harlan Bosworth
and I got interested in collecting
desert glass which is any kind
of clear glass left exposed long
enough to the rays of the desert
sun. It takes on a beautiful
color, varying from faint pink
to fairly deep purple. On the
way to Hart Mountain, we found
these abandoned cabins the Bul
letin tells about to be prize
hunting ground for this desert
treasure that then was quite
highly esteemed.
The papers on the walls of the
cabins dated the glass we found
in the nearby area, and we came
to the conclusion that it takes
15 to 20 years for the sun to
produce a color that collectors
will be really interested in.
IN CLOSING this piece, I want
to repeat that there's almost
NOTHING that newspapers
aren't useful for. You can twist
up old newspapers into a tight
roll and use 'em as insulation
in your walls and if you do a
good job of it, you'll save enough
money on a year's heating bills
to pay your subscription with
thus getting all the other uses
of a newspaper for nothing.
You can light a fire with a
newspaper, whereas aU you can
do to a fire with water is to PUT
IT OUT. During the chilly spring
we've gone through, the last
thing anybody has wanted to do
with a fire has been to put it
out.
Buying MILK Today?
Reach for
GILLIAN'S
Father Faces Charge
For Striking Youngster
Portland (U.R) Earl Ray
mond Johnson, 29, today faced
grand jury action on a charge of
assault with intent to kill. He is
accused of striking his one-month-old
son, Randolf, who re
mained in critical condition in a
local hospital.
The complaint was signed by
the mother, Mrs. Marvis Elaine
Johnson, who told police she
was home at the time the child
was struck last Saturday while
Johnson was changing the
baby's diapers.
IL""'1.- II l, Ml
. .bP m a Mtwll
Stockholm, with SAS De
layed Frequently our Ameri
can conversation is interlarded
with down-to-earth phrases taken
from the outdoors. This was
S-ZS-55
"driven home" to me when I
overheard an American salesman
"spoofing" our pretty SAS hos
tess by saying he wanted to "talk
turkey" with her.
"Talk turkey," she answered,
"I'm so sorry, sir, but I have no
turkey today ..."
Naturally, Europeans are cur
ious as to how such expressions
come into our language. .
"To talk turkey" of course
means to get down ot brass tacks
and to "omit the fancy trim
mings." It got into our language
from early American days when
the colonists dealt with Indians.
The latter wanted to trade many
articles, mostly useless to the col
onists, while the former wanted
only "to talk turkey" with them
that is, to swap for the delic
ious wild turkevs.
Theodore Roosevelt unwitting
ly brought a colorful word into
tne nursery namely, "teddy
bear." While President, Teddy
Roosevelt went on a hunting trip
and refused to shoot a small
bear. Reporters leaped upon the
story and newspapers published
it, and an enterprising toy rag
bear manufacturer quickly
"cashed in" on the story true
or not by naming his product
"teddy bears."
Mammoth From Russia
And, incidentally, our word
mammoth comes from Russia,
not Hollywood meanine of heine
"super-colossal," it actually re-
iers xo a now extinct species of
elephant the wooly. or north
ern mammoth coming from the
Russian word for it, Mammot. It
had very long upwardly curv
ing tusks, and from its many re
mains found in northern lands,
including Alaska, it stood per
haos 12-14 feet high.
So, anything resembling the
mammoth (mammot) in size is
mammoth, as is a mammoth ox.
Another animal, the kangaroo,
came by its name curious! v Tt
said that when Captain James
Cook discovered Australia and
nrst saw the kangaroo he was, to
say the least, "bowled owr w.
demanded of a native what the
name ol the curious animal was.
The native who
him, quite honestly, said: "kan
garoo, wnich meant: "I do not
know." But mistakpnlv -;
r 9 UMllH
Cook thought that was the name
or tne animal and in repeating
it, handed the name down fnr
posterity.
The Australians have added
an additional meaning: "kanga
roo feathers." This means some
thing non-existent or obviously
absurd. In short, stuff and non
sense. Much like Olir American
"horse feathers."
(Released by
McClura Nawspapar Syndicate)
Free: By sptcial arranoamant
with tha editors of tha rn..in.
pedia Americana, my panel of
juages will award aach waak to
tne reader who sands ma tha bast
question on natura and wildlifa
a complete 30-volume set of this
world-famous referanca work in
a handsome Sealeraft binding
Each waak, new questions will
be considarad. Sorry, I simply
can't answer vour manv friandlv
letters. Plaasa address your ques
tions to: IS THAT SOI co Mad
ford Mail Tribune, Box 575. Sau-
salito. Calif.
NOW
IS THE TIME
to start building an insured
savings account with ui. You
will find it pleasant and
profitable to invest hero.
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N
of Medford -27
North Holly
An Institution Dedicated
To Those Who Save
Patterson Vetoes
Three Measures,
HB 49, 781, 547
Salem (U.PJ Gov. Paul L.
Patterson vetoed three bills yes
terday, one on grounds that it
might jeopardize receipt of fed
eral funds in Oregon and an
other on grounds it was uncon
stitional. The third was a com
panion bill to the first.
The governor vetoed House
bill 49 which would require most
state agencies to come under a
standard rule-making and hear
ing procedure.
He said that while an effort
was made to amend the measure
to exclude, in part, agencies re
ceiving federal grants, "there is
still a serious question as to
whether the operation of the
law would not disqualify us to
continue in the match - money
programs with the federal gov
ernment on public welfare and,
perhaps, unemployment compen
sation." Gov. Patterson said "I do not
believe it is wise to jeopardize
these funds, and feel that time
should be taken to get appropri
ate decisions from the affected
federal agencies in order that
the matter could be very clear
before the act becomes law."
The bill was introduced by the
House Judiciary committee at
request of the Oregon State
Bar.
Gov. Patterson vetoed House
bill 781 which provided a $30,
000 appropriation to effect the
standard rule-making and hear
ing procedure.
Another measure vetoed was
to license auctioneers, House
bill 547. He said the section pro
viding for license fees "places
the determination of the amount
there of within the discretion of
the board of auctioneers, up to
specified limits, which is uncon
stitutional." PTA Urged To
Forego Politics
Chicago (U.R) A charge of
engaging in politics confronted
the National Congress of Parents
and Teachers today.
Five members of the Indian
apolis PTA telegraphed protests
to the congress, requesting the
elimination from the legislative
platform of any endorsement of
federal aid for education.
The Indiana members said
many local PTA units and mem
bers were becoming increasingly
dissatisfied . with the national
PTA support of federal aid. In
diana in the last few years had
rejected federal aid, they said.
The- congress was to wind up
its sessions today with action on
a number of resolutions. No con
troversial issues had ben antici
pated. The 3000 delegates yesterday
elected a new president, Mrs.
Rollin Brown, Los Angeles. She
defeated Harry Reynolds, Wi
nona, Minn., for the post by a
vote of 1102 to 188. Reynolds,
the first male candidate for the
office in the PTA's 59-year his
tory, was nominated from the
floor.
San Francisco (U.R) Police
figured they shouldn't have
much trouble finding ' Mrs.
Schatze A. Weicker's stolen car.
She said the car. was a white
1955 Cadillac hardtop convert
ible, ornamented in gold and
worth $6500.
Adrie
CASUAL COORDINATES
By... y
Gay, go-with-everything
Separates at . . .
Cool Savings for the Holidays!
Pastel Rainbow-Striped Denim
O Pedal Pushers
O Shorts II 1
O Jackets M
O Blouses
O Bras
Halters
PRICE
GET HERE EARLY FOR THESE SPECIALS!
Take advantage,
stock up for Sunny,
214 EAST MAIN
A 1
ane
Communications
Letters to the Editor mutt bear
the name and address ol the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a Den name or
initial for publication is Dermis
tible. The Mai Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
Scotland vs Delinquency
To the Editor: We make most
grevious mistakes in becoming
too complacent over grevious
happenings of the day, usually
blaming it on somebody else.
We get all het ujj, blame our
patient, long enduring president
and other top-officials noted for
their sincerity, for "having
bungled" the Salk polio vaccine
campaign. Fact of the matter is,
polio claims two victims per
100,000 population. But the au
tomobile takes a deadly toll of
50 per 100,000, all in the same
age group. But there seems to
be no great hue and cry over .
it. Why? Because there is no
one to blame but our very own
selves. So, it's getting to be ac
cepted as "just one of those
things," to complain or grieve
over.
Like the answer of Columnist
Hurlock in the Mail Tribune
who wrote a complaining par
ent that their 15 year old son's
penchant for "running around
spending money and refusal to"
help around home," was the par
ent's fault, that they should
have established rules of con
duct in his first early years and
seen to it that he obeyed them
and thus become used to some
degree of discipline. Just that
simple.
What we so often hopelessly
and often mistakenly refer to
as juvenile delinquency, the
thrifty practical Scotch people
regard as a part of youth, the
courting of danger, natural as
eating, getting in deviltry, they
handle in a simple inexpensive
way, as a visiting Scot related.
Those in charge, he told me,
keep a weather eye on unruly
kids, especially those showing
hereditary traits. If becoming
too rambunctious, they're bund
led off to the boys training ship
anchored ten miles off shore.
There they learn real discipline
that they can't run away from.
They finish their studies and
get training in both old time sail
and steam navigation, and they
get a plentiful bellyf ull of court
ing "danger from riding out the
North Sea storms that pound
the Scottish coasts. Monotony of
ship-life is relieved with an oc
casional cruise. Many of them
stay with the sea, giving Scot
land a steady supply of well
trained and seasoned sailormen.
And there is no gangsterism in
all Scotland as we so well know
here, save that by foreign born
elements, mostly Reds.
F. J. Clifford,
1211 W. Main
Sale Success
To the Editor: The Blue Star
Mothers of America wish to an
nounce the success of the daisy
sale, held on the streets of Med
ford May 20 and 21st. They
thank the officials of the city of
Medford, for making the sale
possible by giving their permis
sion to hold the sale, the Med
ford Mail Tribune for publiciz
ing the sale, and the public wha
contributed so generously.
The proceeds of the daisy sale
will' be used to help rehabilitate
the wheelchair patients at Camp
White.
Mrs. Fred Middlebusher
1517 West Main St.
TV.rf line Sundav Classified to at
nnnn SnfnrrlAv 1 a. m. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 oreviousday.
nne s
of this offer to
care - free days ahead.
nnes
- - -PHONE 2-7169