Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 11, 1955, Image 4

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CZHALP LATHAM. Circulation Mar.
An IndananriaBt Nc-arsnaeer
catered as aecood daea matter at
tad feed. Oregon, under Act of
March 3,
197
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Official Paper ef the City of Medford
omeiai rarer at jacasen jaunty
United Press FuU Leased Wire
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Or CIRCULATION
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, Offices in New York. Chicago. De
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rusutHitf
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
July 11. 194S
(It was Wednesday)
Robert Rucker installed as
president of Medford Junior
Chamber of Commerce.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Reports
from the hills and lakes state
the mosquitoes are as big as pan
thers, and four times as hungry.
tO YEARS AGO -
jir li. ins
at was Thursday)
Harvesting Bartlett pear crop
in , Rogue valley to start about
Aug. 19, a month later than last
year.
Temperature reaches 80 In
Medford; monthly average be
low normal with unusually cold
weather for this late In summer.
0 YEARS AGO
July 11. 1925
(It was Saturday)
- Dayton, Tenn., July 11 (AP)
Prosecution counsel in the
" Scopes case hold that admission
f expert testimony of scientists
and theologians would convert
the trial of the Dayton biology
instructor into a joint debate on
' science and religion.
Stephen A. Mather, director of
National Park service, outlines
enlargement program for Crater
Lake National Park Including
paving of roads.
40 YEARS AGO
July 11, MIS
Qt was Sunday)
City council calls hearing on
subject Of rebonding Medford
for $759,290. - J
July folder of Southern Pa
cific's Shasta route includes ad
vertisement on visiting Crater
Lake. .'
What's th3 Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Cop. 1955, Ufterial tUaaarch Repait
1. The new agreements in the
auto industry for guaranteed
wages for 26 weeks do or don't
require changes in many state un
employment pay laws?
2. . Most infants taken for adop
tion through the "black market
for babies" are illegitimate; right
or wrong?
3. Number of movie theatres
over 1953, or decreased, or stay
ed the same?
decreased, or stayed the same?
4. The first President to live
in the White House was Wash
ington, John Adams, Jefferson,
Madison or Jackson?
5. More persons of Jewish
stock live in the U.S. than in
any other single country; right
or wrong?
6. Chop suey originated in
North China, South China, Hong
Kong, Japan, India or the U.S.?
7. A "spritzer," in current
slang, is a jallopy, unfaithful
wife, heavy bettor, heavy drink
er, swindler, or drug addict?
The answers: 1. Do. 2. Right.
3. Increased. 4. John Adams. 5.
Right. S. The UJ. 7. Swindler.
French Legionnaires
Desert in Suez Canal
Cairo. Eevnt-(U.R) Police re
ported today that 64 French For
eign Legionnaires deserted ship
in the Suez Canal. They were en
route to Morocco from Indo
china. This was the second such de
sertion. Last week 71 Legion
naires left a troop ship from St
Valery.
mail tribune
A chorus of editorial voices in Oregon has welled
up in the last week, expressing a variety of responses
to the news that Davy Crockett was a bum..
This outburst has been motivated by an article in
the current Harper's magazine which engaged in the
grand old American tradition of debunking folk
heroes.
X7E can't resist joining the chorus, for, though we
" have enjoyed Walt Disney's creation of a hero
named D. Crockett, we've had a sneaky hunch all
along that that's just what
Disney.
The overwhelming juvenile response to this syn
thetic hero has been a fad, similar to the. Hopalong
Cassidy, Roy Rogers, and spaceman fads, and will
wane, we presume, as quickly. Meantime it has filled
the resounding, air with the strains of a catchy tune,
has filled the neighborhoods with the sharp crack of
plastic "Old Betsy" long rifles, and caused a spate of
bad jokes. (One columnist insists fie thought the song
said, not "Killed him a bar when he was only three,"
but, "Killed IN a bar when he was only three."
He was sort of wistful when he learned the truth);
OERE are significant portions of the Harper's arti
cle. Read 'em and weep (or rejoice) :
The historic truth is that Davy Crockett was a juvenile
delinquent who ran away from home at the age of thirteen,
to dodge a well-deserved licking by his father, a country
saloon keeper. For three years he bummed around Balti
more, scratching a living in various ways he never cared to
talk about. At eighteen he went to school for six months
while making a pass at a girl who preferred a boy friend
' who could read, but he gave it up as soon as he found that
even the ABCs wouldn't get him to first base. (Later he mar
ried a less intellectual woman, whom he deserted after she
produced a small herd of children). He proved himself
according to accepted historical authority :"a poor farmer,
indolent and shiftless." He also was an unenthusiastic
soldier; during the Creek War he weasled his way out of '
, the army by hiring a substitute to fill out his term of
service.
Since work was distasteful to Davy, he became, in turn,
a backwoods justice of the peace who boasted about his ,
ignorance of law; an unsuccessful .politician; a hack writer,
heavily dependent on some unidentified ghost; and hear ...
this, Junior a violinist. Whenever a steady job threatened,
he took to the woods.- He never was king of anything except
maybe the Tennessee Tall Tales and Bourbon Samplers'
Association. When he claimed that he had shot 105 bear
in nine months, his fellow tipplers refused to believe a word
of it, on the sensible grounds that Davy couldn't count that
high ...
11E suspect that these historically-substantiated
" heresies will have little effect on the bear-grin-nin'
set. and that the Davy Crockett mania will run
its course, to be succeeded in due time by some other
folk figure, who will then be pressed into service to
sell as many cases of breakfast cereal, sleazy cos
tumes and plastic toys as did the juvenile delinquent
from Tennessee. '. , '
Let us nofcmourn his passing when it occurs, and
we may as well welcome,
cessor. It's all part of growing up and smart mer
chandising. E.A.
William Shakespeare, Author
A leap from the illiterate frontiersman to the Bard
of Avon may be fantastic, but is a pleasant one-7-particularly
in view of the festival pf William Shake
speare's plays which is only a few weeks off in Ash
land.
William, too, has been the' subject of debunking
which may or may not be true. The Bard, whose leg
end goes further into history than does Davy's, is
less susceptible to accurate checking. But this does
not deter the theory-makers, who have ground out all
sorts of plausible explanations that Shakespeare, the
man, was just as literarily limited as Davy Crockett,
and that credit for his plays in truth belongs to Fran
cis Bacon, the Earl of Oxford, or somebody, else. -
e e e. a
CHQULD this worry us?
T Not at all. The fact is that Shakespeare is not re
nowned for the legends surrounding him, but for the
solid works of his (or someone else's) pen. These can
be seen, read and savored, and as far as enjoyment
goes, it matters not a whit who did the writing.
Unless and until the authorship is proven other
wise, the plays will go on being read and performed
under the name of William Shakespeare. And "The
play's the thing."
TTHE secret of Shakespeare's appeal is in his essen-
tial timelessnsss, with lessons and morals for to
day, as well as for yesterday. Could not this speech
(from Much Ado About Nothing) be taken as a com
mentary on the Davy Crockett-Hopalohg Cassidy
fads?: ; , . ;
Seest thou not, I say, what a deformed' thief this fashion
is? how giddily a' turns about all the hot bloods between
fourteen and five- and thirty? sometime fashioning them
like Pharoah's soldiers in the reechy painting, sometime .
like god Bel's priests in the old church-window, sometime
like the shaven Hercules in the smirched worm-eaten
tapestry...? . .
' ' ! .. . .' . :
Sometimes it seems a pity that Shakespeare can t
sell cereal and toys, too. But then he'd be a fad more
virulent than the annual fever at Ashland, and would
soon die. We prefer him as he is, taken in small, per
iodic doses; not the mammoth portions served up on
radio, TV and in the neighborhood play-yards.
English Singer Denies
Romance With Abf Khan
London (U.R) A husky-voiced
English songstress denied reports
today of a . romance with Aly
Khan, ex-husband of actress Rita
Hayworth.
Tilda Lee, 25, back in London
from a Paris singing engagement,
admitted Aly insisted she sing
"C'est Magnifique" six times at
Monday. Julr II. 13S
it was a creation ei Walt
with resignation, his suc
HOUSING PROBLEM
Providence, R. I. (UJ9 Al
though this cfty is . one of the
oldest in the nation, it boasts no
17th century houses. Roger Wil
liams settled Providence in 1636.
The oldest house in the city the
King farm house was built in
1705. -
a Paris party. But she said there
is "positively no romance." .
Matter of
BISON IN A HANGAR
Washington One of the most
significant and curious pieces
of intelligence to come out of
the Soviet Un
ion in a long
time concerns
the production
of the famous
Bison airplane.
The Bison, or
T-37, is the
Russian equiv
alent of our
own intercon
tinental jet
bomber, the
Joseph Also B52. In brief,
the Soviets produced the Bison
prototype by gathering aU the
persons concerned into a single
huge hangar at their Ranens-
koye base outside Moscow and
keeping them there until blue
prints had become aircraft. Air
engineers, air force officers in
charge of the project, scores of
electronic and other specialists,
many hundreds of mechanics
and workmen all these were
held together in a kind of labori
ous purdah until they had done
their job.
United States Air Force au
thorities somewhat ruefully ac
cord full credence to this side
light on Soviet production
methods. Furthermore, they esti
mate that it took only eight
months from the approval of the
Bison blueprints to the moment
when the first Bison rolled out
of Ramenskoye's special con
struction hangar in July, 1953.
After ground-testing, this Bison
prototype is believed to have
made its first experimental
flight in the autumn of 1953.
It was flown over Moscow at
low altitude (and dismissed by
the Pentagon leadership as of
no significance) in May, 1954.
By then, the Bison had reach
ed the stage of in-line produc
tion. Flights of ten Bisons at a
time were observed over Mos
cow this May. The Air Force
officially estimates that the So
viets are now each month pro
ducing from fifteen to twenty
of these bombers which can
strike from Russian bases, with
out refuelling, at the industrial
heartland of the United States.
a a a
r CONTRAST, work on the
American intercontinental jet
bomber, the B-52, began in 1947.
Blueprints were, approved and
the first experimental contracts
were let to the Boeing company
in 1949 the moment crudely
comparable with the first really
in the Ramenskoye hangar. Con
struction proceeded thereafter,
with the air staff in the Penta
gon, the Air Materiel Command
at' Wright Field and the Air
Research and Development Com
mand which was then in Wash
ington, all intervening at fre
quent intervals. . - ;
Two years later, this majestic
but dispersed process produced
its grand result. The first proto
type, the XB-52, which was used
only for , ground-testing, rolled
out of the Boeing plant in Seat
tle in November, 1951. And
nearly three years had passed
from the letting of the experi
mental contract to the comple
tion of the first prototype to
take the air, the YB-52, in
March, 1952.
i The YB-52 was flown that
April. Thereafter, two further
years elapsed before the B-52
went into line production in
August, . 1954. By , May, 1955,
when the Soviets showed their
ten Bisons over Moscow, the
Air Force had approximately 30
B-52s. In sum, planning of the
B-52 began eight years, ago and
actual construction began six
years ago. Planning of the Bison
probably began four years ago
and actual construction began
less than three years ago. The
B-52 entered squadron service
in June and the Bison entered
squadron service this month.'
a a
NOR is this the only melan
cholv contrast that needs
careful thinking about. By this
spring, our B-52 production had
reached the planned peak of ten
nlanes tier month. Then the Mos
cow overflights aroused public
opinion and secretary of, De
fense Charles E. Wilson reluc
tantly asked for funds to finance
an increase of B-52 output. Sec
retary Wilson's request will taxe
some time to get results. Our
B-52 production will rise to 13
planes per month, as against
the - estimated Soviet monthly
production of 15 to 20 Bisons.
In other words, Soviet air
craft "lead time" the all-important
interval between the
nlantinf of the seed and the
final harvest of finished aircraft
is about half or our ieaa urne
in America. Even in the category
of aircraft on which aU Ameri
can strategy, depends, and even
after the American effort nas
been intensified under severe
nuhlic nressure. the experts
think that the Soviets are now
out-producing this country by
a narrow margin.
The arrim efficiency of the
rough and ready methods is typi
fied by that hangar at Kamens
koye, and by our habit of pour
in p our resources into ermine-
lined Cadillacs while the Soviets
concentrate the world s second
industrial economy almost fully
nn war nrodiiction. These ex
plain the fact that the Soviets
are now seizing the lead in the
air that used to belong to the
United States. This both a
3&.jajM'
Fact y joPh
major scandal and a bleak threat
to the survival of the nation,
It demands more detailed 'con
sideration.
(Copyright. 1953,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
BySbfev&efteV.
laiam Hamallat
With all today's talk about
rockets, space ships and super-
jets, isn't it about time to check
up on the worlds beyond us? So
here goes for a short quiz on
our solar system. Get 80 per
cent and you're ready for sky
rocketing; if 60, you'd better
dust off some outer space lit
erature; if less than 40, brother,
you'd better stay at home.
1. What star is nearest our
earth?
2. When you arrive at the
moon, will there be earthlight
as we have moonlight here?
3. Which planet has the hot-
741-55
test temperature?
4. When does the earth come
nearest the sun?
5. Where was atomic energy
used long before World War
II?
Answers:
1. Our sun is the nearest star,
by far. The next one is some 25
trillion miles away. As for size,
it's around average although
there are many stars thousands
of times larger and thousands
of times brighter.
- 2. Yes, there is earthlight on
the moon. The sun's light, strik
ing the earth and its atmosphere
is reflected back into space and
part of this reflection hits the
moon. You can proye this when
you look at a brand new moon
besides the bright crescent the
rest of the moon can be seen
dimly. That dim part is caused
by earthlight.
'3. Mercury. The temperature
of the side which faces the sun
is about 700 degrees fahrenheit,
4. ' Surprisingly enough, in
January. Early - in this month
the earth is about 3,000,000
miles closer to the sun than in
July. As for our seasons,, these
are not. due too much to the
nearness to the sun but rather
to the tilt of -the earth on its
axis..-"
5. Man wasn't first to discov
er atomic energy the sun has
been using it right along and
we have been benefiting by it.
The sun's radiation is the result
of the conversion of hydrogen
atoms to helium atoms. Needless
to say, the amounts of energy
released are incredible.
(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 reader who sends me the
best true-life nature adventure,
or the best nature observation,
or the best question on nature
and wildlife a complete 30-vol-ume
set of this world - famous
reference work in a handsome
Sealcraft binding.
Each week new submissions
will be considered. Sorry, I
simply can't answer your many
friendly letters. Please address
your letter to: IS THAT SO
care of Medford Mail Tribune,
Box 575, Sausalito, Calif.
Stranded Ship
Freed By Tugs
Astoria (U.R) The freighter
Santa Adela, aground since last
Thursday in the Youngs Bay
mud flats, was pulled free yes
terday through the combined ef
forts of three tugs and the U.S.
Coast Guard cutter Yacor-a.
The grain-laden vessel was
free at 2:43 p.m., and proceeded
to dock at Astoria for a damage
estimate. If no damage has been
done she will continue en route
to Central and South American
ports. Otherwise she will put
back to Portland for repairs.
The ship had been wedged in
the mud near the mouth of the
Columbia river, since she tried to
put to sea from Astoria Thurs
day. Bunker oil and water were re
moved to lighten the ship but
she resisted all attempts by the
tug Salvage Chief to pall her
free until Saturday when she
moved slightly and developed
a 15 degree starboard list
Finally, by a method of scour
ing the channel with propellor
wash and then pulling with the
tugs, the vessel came free. Sev
eral hundred spectators had ga
thered on the shore to watch the
operations.
The first Cliff House at San
Francisco was erected in 1858.
i
President Moves Far in Decision
To Meet With Soviets a? Geneva
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) President
Eisenhower has moved far in
three months from faint hope to
cautious con
fidence that
s o m ething
solid will come
of next week's
Geneva meet
ing at the
summit.
As recenUy
as mid-spring,
Mr. Eisenhow
er opposed the
Lyle C. Wilson meeting. Then
Prime Minister Winston Chur
chill was pressing for it again
with a British general election
coming up. The only crackling
issue British Socialists could
raise against Churchill's Con
servatives was a demand that
the Big. Four heads of state
meet quickly in search of peace.
The French . government was
under like popular pressure for
a spectacular international ef-
- I 1
4 -:
3 At? Vicf
PAINED EXPRESSION on face of Stanley Reith, 10, is due
to concern for 2-week-old fawn as Dr. J. D. Cozzens sets frac
tured leg at Big Bear, Cal. Fawn was found by roadside. Per
mission was given Stanley to keep it until September when
game warden says it must be turned loose. (International)
As We Live
Don't Make Hasty Decision ;
About Marital Breakup
-Hasty decisions are usually re
gretted as time passes. When the
decision affects the happiness of
a number of people, it should be
made only after careful consid
eration of the problem from
every possible angle. That is the
advice I am giving the wan who
wrote:
(Q) "My wife and I have been
having trouble for the past few
years. I think she is overworked
because we
have two
young children
and that keeps
her tied down
to the home.
She is fretful
and cross
when I come
home from
work and I
. Dr. H lock guess , I have
gotten pretty sore at her many
times because of her martyr at
titude. The other night,, when I
came home from work, I found
the house empty and a note say
ing she had taken the children
to her mother's home and had no
intention of returning. She sug
gested that I seu the home and
furniture so I could give her
money to live on at her mother's.
I have worked hard to buy this
home and furniture.' but I can't
afford to send her money and
MM Officials, Union
Reach Understanding
Portland "(U.R) M and M
Plywood company officials said
yesterday an understanding had
been reached with union repre
sentatives -- whereby ' operations
would resume at the company's
five plants "while strike issues
were being settled.
Mediator LeRoy Smith, who
called the meeting in an '"mpt
to settle the 10-day-old strike,
said the agreement provided that
"the company will operate its
plywood plants on - identical
terms and working conditions
as existed as of June 30, 1955,
and that negotiations on disput
ed issues continue for the next
30 days."
Although union locals must
still ratify the accord, it appar
ently paves the way for reopen
ing of plants at Portland, Al
bany, Lyons and Idanha, Ore.,
and Eureka, Calif.
Some 1500 company em
ployees struck 'July-1 after M
and M refused to renew an old
contract without certain modi
fications.
The baby hippopotamus
weighs about 100 pounds - at
birth ' and can swim ' before it
can walk. .
, i .....
l2NJ3CaBsteiHsi
fort to ease Western Europe's
dread of atomic war.
Former President Truman got
his fill of summit conferences
at Potsdam as the war in the
West ended in 1945, Thereafter
he cheerfully offered to meet
the late Josef Stalin anytime
the Cpmmunist boss would come
to Washington. Mr. Eisenhower
was less severe. ,
Wanted Deeds. Not Words
He always said he was willing
to go anywhere anytime in
search of peace. But in March
and early April, the President
thought the time had not come.
He wanted deeds, not words, in
proof of Russian good faith. Oh
March, 23, in response to Chur
chill's urgings, the . President
said there was no more than
"faint hope" that something val
uable would come of a meeting
with the new men in charge of
the Kremlin.
- At the most, Mr. Eisenhower
was thinking then .in terms of a
meeting of foreign ministers
which might lead in time to the
meeting of the heads of state
which - Churchill so much, de-
By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D.
live here too; Do - you think I
should wait , and' see if she
changes her mind or should I go
ahead and seU the house as she
suggested? She has been talking
about leaving for the last year.
so I know this is not just a hasty
decision on her part
Your wife's decision may not
be hasty but, after she has had
an opportunity to get rested and
see matters from a new angle,
she may bitterly regret urging
you to sell what you and she
have worked so hard to build
up. . .
The chances are that you
could not get what you put into
the house or the furniture. Then,
if your wife changed her mind
later, it would mean starting out
from scratch and paying more
than you received for the pres
ent house and furniture. -:
Wait for a reasonable time,
six months or a year; before sell
ing. In the meantime, you might
be able to rent the house fur
nished to someone and this
would enable you to send money
to your ; wife without cutting
you too short.
You will find it expensive to
live apart, even for a short time,
and you; may not be able to do
this on your salary alone. If,
after a year, your wife does not
change , her mind, that will be
plenty of time to decide to sell
and divide what you get with
her.' '- - :
(COPYRIGHT IMS,
GENERAL FEATURES CORP.)
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price
Since 190G
Mortuary
Phone 2-6675
PERL
sired. ' The British in mid-April
called their election for May .
26. "
By May 10, Mr. Eisenhower
had been convinced, and the
British-American-French . invite
tion went forward to Moscow
proposing a Big Four meeting at
the summit.
There has been a growing
sentiment throughout the world
that some good might come from
such a conference,!' Mr. Eisen
hower told his news conference
the next day. "Such meeting .
would probably result in at least
some clarification of the air."
Faint Praise At Best
That was faint praise, at best
There is nothing in that lan-,
guage to show that the Presi
dent agreed with world senti
ment, that the Big Four should .
now meet On the contrary, Mr.
Eisenhower, made it fair to be
lieve he agreed to the meeting
more to appease Western Euro
pean public sentiment than for
any other reason.
That was especially true of the
British public. Announcement
of . the Big Four invitation de
stroyed any hope the British
Socialists may have had of turn
ing the Conservatives out The .
President would not weep if his
legitimate policy decisions
helped his old friend. Sir Win
ston Churchill, and tripped up
a political party committed, ttv -
Socialism, an "ism" for which
Mr, Eisenhower does not care.
That's how the United States
got into the act. The situation
has changed. Mr. Eisenhower is
optimistic. Now he says "there
obviously- has been some
change" in the Kremlin's atti
tude which could "have a fine
effect on the entire situation."
Chances Are Better
Recentlv he said: "I nersonal.
ly believe from what I learned
in San Francisco, (at the United
Nations anniversary) and
through my talks, that the
chances were better than- I
thought they were three months
ago."
That is a long way from the
-faint hope" of last March. Not
all of the State Department ex
perts go. along with the Presi
dent Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles seemed to be mors
hopeful than the President was
last March, and now to see a
somewhat less rosy situation
than the . one visioned by his
boss.
The President and his party
take off next Friday for Geneva
to learn the hard and only way -what
the intentions of the Soviet
Union . really are Perhaps 1 in
the back of the President's mind
is - the awesome thought that
here lies a chance to rise even
higher than in his wartime cru
sade in Europe.
If U. S. Sent Yon
GEO. N. TAYLOR
- If you went to England as our
ambassador, you would carry a
letter to give you standing with
their govern
ment Just so,
when Christ
came to this
world. He
jnuit bive
proof that He
for God. His
miracles . were
proof as when
He turned the
water into
wine at the
marriage in
This beginning
Cana of Galilee,
of miracles did
jesus ana his
disciples believe that He had a
message from God.
Jesus was right in giving inese
miracles as signs 'For , the
Jews require a sign." 1st Corin
thians 1:22. So for three years
Jesus gave ' them miracles
signs. And they believed that
He had a message from God. It
was a message of love and back
ed Dy aeeas oi love, uaa cnanges
not Todav receive Christ as the
Lord and Saviour who died for
your sins and God gives you
eternal life. Then by Bible and
prayer go ahead. This message
sponsored by a Scappoose dairy
man and family. - - adv.
PERL'S every family ;
may , make funeral w
; rangements which , arc In
keeping with its means. A
selection of services In
very pries rang Is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences and to mott
all financial circumstances.'
Convenient Terms?
- - Certainty;
Raw